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DOI: 10.1094/MPMI-18-0103
Diversification of Non-TIR Class NB-LRR Genes in Relation to Whole-Genome
Duplication Events in Arabidopsis. Kan Nobuta (1), Tom Ashfield (1),
Sun Kim (2), and Roger W. Innes (1). (1) Department of Biology and (2) School of
Informatics, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN 47405, U.S.A. MPMI 18:103-109.
Submitted 2 September 2004. Accepted 27 September 2004. Copyright 2005 The
American Phytopathological Society.
Arabidopsis thaliana is believed to have experienced at least two
and possibly three whole-genome duplication events in its evolutionary history.
In order to investigate the evolutionary relationships between these duplication
events and diversification of disease resistance (R) genes,
segmental-duplication events containing R genes belonging to the
nucleotide binding-leucine rich repeat (NB-LRR) class were identified. Of 153
segmental-duplication events containing NB-LRR genes, only 22 contained NB-LRR
genes in both members of the duplication pair, indicating a high frequency of
NB-LRR gene loss after whole-genome duplication. The relative age of the
duplication events was estimated based on the average synonymous substitution
rate of the duplicated gene pairs in the segments. These data were combined with
phylogenetic analyses. NB-LRR genes present in segment pairs derived from the
most recent whole-genome duplication event, estimated to have occurred only 20
to 40 million years ago, occupy very distant branches of the NB-LRR phylogenetic
tree. These data suggest that when NB-LRR clusters are duplicated as part
of a whole-genome duplication, homoeologous NB-LRR genes are
preferentially lost, either by eliminating one copy of the cluster or by
eliminating individual genes such that only paralogous NB-LRR genes are
maintained.
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