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Molecular evolution of duplicate copies of genes encoding cytosolic glutamine synthetase in Pisum sativum

Authors :
Gloria M. Coruzzi
Pamela J. Green
Elsbeth L. Walker
N. F. Weeden
Crispin B. Taylor
Source :
Plant Molecular Biology. 29:1111-1125
Publication Year :
1995
Publisher :
Springer Science and Business Media LLC, 1995.

Abstract

Here, we describe two nearly identical expressed genes for cytosolic glutamine synthetase (GS3A and GS3B) in Pisum sativum L. RFLP mapping data indicates that the GS3A and GS3B genes are separate loci located on different chromosomes. DNA sequencing of the GS3A and GS3B genes revealed that the coding regions are 99% identical with only simple nucleotide substitutions resulting in three amino acid differences. Surprisingly, the non-coding regions (5′ non-coding leader, the 11 introns, and 3′ non-coding tail) all showed a high degree of identity (96%). In these non-coding regions, 25% of the observed differences between the GS3A and GS3B genes were deletions or duplications. The single difference in the 3′ non-coding regions of the GS3A and GS3B genes was a 25 bp duplication of an AU-rich element in the GS3B gene. As the GS3B mRNA accumulates to lower levels than the GS3A gene, we tested whether this sequence which resembles an mRNA instability determinant functioned as such in the context of the GS mRNA. Using the GS3B 3′ tail as part of a chimeric gene in transgenic plants, we showed that this AU-rich sequence has little effect on transgene mRNA levels. To determine whether the GS3A/GS3B genes represent a recent duplication, we examined GS3-like genes in genomic DNA of ancient relatives of P. sativum. We observed that several members of the Viceae each contain two genomic DNA fragments homologous to the GS3B gene, suggesting that this is an ancient duplication event. Gene conversion has been invoked as a possible mechanism for maintaining the high level of nucleotide similarity found between the GS3A and GS3B genes. Possible evolutionary reasons for the maintenance of these ‘twin’ GS genes in pea, and the general duplication of genes for cytosolic GS in all plant species are discussed.

Details

ISSN :
15735028 and 01674412
Volume :
29
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Plant Molecular Biology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....dffe756a65a62803feb042b235393ef6
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00020456