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Maintenance of plastid RNA editing activities independently of their target sites
Author(s) -
Tillich Michael,
Poltnigg Peter,
Kushnir Sergei,
SchmitzLinneweber Christian
Publication year - 2006
Publication title -
embo reports
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 4.584
H-Index - 184
eISSN - 1469-3178
pISSN - 1469-221X
DOI - 10.1038/sj.embor.7400619
Subject(s) - biology , nicotiana tabacum , rna editing , genetics , ploidy , rna , nicotiana , genome , translation (biology) , computational biology , gene , messenger rna , solanaceae
RNA editing in plant organelles is mediated by site‐specific, nuclear‐encoded factors. Previous data suggested that the maintenance of these factors depends on the presence of their rapidly evolving cognate sites. The surprising ability of allotetraploid Nicotiana tabacum (tobacco) to edit a foreign site in the chloroplast ndhA messenger RNA was thought to be inherited from its diploid male ancestor, Nicotiana tomentosiformis . Here, we show that the same ndhA editing activity is also present in Nicotiana sylvestris , which is the female diploid progenitor of tobacco and which lacks the ndhA site. Hence, heterologous editing is not simply a result of tobacco's allopolyploid genome organization. Analyses of other editing sites after sexual or somatic transfer between land plants showed that heterologous editing occurs at a surprisingly high frequency. This suggests that the corresponding editing activities are conserved despite the absence of their target sites, potentially because they serve other functions in the plant cell.