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Tobacco locus granule-bound starch synthase 1
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Locus | |
Locus name | granule-bound starch synthase 1 |
Symbol | gbss1 |
Gene activity | starch sunthase |
Description | |
Chromosome | |
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Links to external databases | None |
Registry name: | None | [Associate registry name] |
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Autonomous transposition of the tobacco retrotransposon Tto1 in rice.
The Plant cell (1996)
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The complete nucleotide sequence of the tobacco retrotransposon Tto1, one of the few active retrotransposons of plants, was determined. The sequence analysis suggests that Tto1 carries all functions required for autonomous transposition through reverse transcription. Gene organization and the nature of the transcription product suggest that Tto1 uses a gene expression mechanism different from those employed by retroviruses and most retrotransposons to regulate Gag and Pol stoichiometry. Tto1 was introduced into rice to study its autonomous transposition in heterologous hosts. Transcription and transposition of Tto1 were observed in rice cells. To probe the autonomous transposition through reverse transcription, a modified Tto1 retrotransposon in which part of a reverse transcriptase gene was replaced with an intron-containing hygromycin resistance gene was constructed and introduced into rice cells. Loss of the intron was observed only when intact Tto1 was cotransfected. These results indicate that Tto1 can transpose autonomously through reverse transcription and that the host factors required for transposition are conserved among monocots (class Magnoliopsida; rice) and dicots (class Liliopsida; tobacco), which diverged approximately 200 million years ago. These findings are discussed in relation to the regulation and evolution of retrotransposons and the possible use of Tto1 as a molecular genetic tool.
Hirochika, H. Otsuki, H. Yoshikawa, M. Otsuki, Y. Sugimoto, K. Takeda, S.
The Plant cell.
1996.
8(4).
725-34.
Auxin and cytokinin have opposite effects on amyloplast development and the expression of starch synthesis genes in cultured bright yellow-2 tobacco cells.
Plant physiology (1999)
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In cultured Bright Yellow-2 (BY-2) tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum) cells, the depletion of auxin (2,4-dichlorophenoxyacetic acid) in the culture medium induces the accumulation of starch. This is accelerated by the addition of cytokinin (benzyladenine). Light and electron microscopic observations revealed that this amyloplast formation involves drastic changes in plastid morphology. The effects of auxin and cytokinin on amyloplast development were investigated by adding auxin or cytokinin to cells grown in a hormone-free culture. Auxin repressed amyloplast development, whereas cytokinin accelerated starch accumulation regardless of the timing of hormone addition. RNA gel-blot analysis revealed that the accumulation of the ADP-glucose pyrophosphorylase small subunit gene (AgpS), granule-bound starch synthase, and starch branching enzyme transcripts were also affected by hormonal conditions. High levels of AgpS, granule-bound starch synthase, and starch branching enzyme transcripts accumulated in amyloplast-developing cells grown in auxin-depleted conditions. Furthermore, the addition of auxin to the cells cultured in hormone-free medium reduced the level of AgpS transcripts, whereas the addition of cytokinin increased it, irrespective of the timing of hormone addition. These results suggest that auxin and cytokinin exert opposite effects on amyloplast development by regulating the expression of the genes required for starch biosynthesis.
Miyazawa, Y. Sakai, A. Miyagishima, S. Takano, H. Kawano, S. Kuroiwa, T.
Plant physiology.
1999.
121(2).
461-69.
Pervasive purifying selection characterizes the evolution of I2 homologs.
Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI (2006)
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We sampled 384 sequences related to the Solanum pimpinellifolium (=Lycopersicon pimpinellifolium) disease resistance (R) gene 12 from six species, potato, S. demissum, tomato, eggplant, pepper, and tobacco. These species represent increasing phylogenetic distance from potato to tobacco, within the family Solanaceae. Using sequence data from the nucleotide binding site (NBS) region of this gene, we tested models of gene family evolution and inferred patterns of selection acting on the NBS gene region and I2 gene family. We find that the I2 family has diversified within the family Solanaceae for at least 14 million years and evolves through a slow birth-and-death process requiring approximately 12 million years to homogenize gene copies within a species. Analyses of selection resolved a general pattern of strong purifying selection acting on individual codon positions within the NBS and on NBS lineages through time. Surprisingly, we find nine codon positions strongly affected by positive selection and six pairs of codon positions demonstrating correlated amino acid substitutions. Evolutionary analyses serve as bioinformatic tools with which to sort through the vast R gene diversity in plants and find candidates for new resistance specificities or to identify specific amino acid positions important for biochemical function. The slow birth-and-death evolution of I2 genes suggests that some NBS-leucine rich repeat-mediated resistances may not be overcome rapidly by virulence evolution and that the natural diversity of R genes is a potentially valuable source for durable resistance.
Couch, BC. Spangler, R. Ramos, C. May, G.
Molecular plant-microbe interactions : MPMI.
2006.
19(3).
288-303.
Tracking ancient polyploids: a retroposon insertion reveals an extinct diploid ancestor in the polyploid origin of belladonna.
Molecular biology and evolution (2006)
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Polyploidy is a prominent process in plant evolution and adaptation, but molecular phylogenetic studies of polyploids based on DNA sequences have often been confounded by their complex gene and genome histories. We report here a retroposon insertion in the nuclear gene granule-bound starch synthase I (GBSSI or "waxy") that clearly reveals the ancient hybrid history of the medically important polyploid species belladonna (Atropa belladonna) and resolves the controversy over the taxonomic group to which it belongs, the tribe Hyoscyameae (Solanaceae). Our inferences based on the pattern of presence or absence of the retroposon insertion are corroborated by phylogenetic analyses of the GBSSI gene sequences. This case may suggest that retroposons are promising molecular markers to study polyploid evolution.
Yuan, YW. Zhang, ZY. Chen, ZD. Olmstead, RG.
Molecular biology and evolution.
2006.
23(12).
2263-7.
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