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Identification, characterisation and molecular modelling of two AP endonucleases from base excision repair pathway in sugarcane provide insights on the early evolution of green plants
Author(s) -
Maira N.,
Torres T. M.,
Oliveira A. L.,
Medeiros S. R. B.,
AgnezLima L. F.,
Lima J. P. M. S.,
Scortecci K. C.
Publication year - 2014
Publication title -
plant biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.871
H-Index - 87
eISSN - 1438-8677
pISSN - 1435-8603
DOI - 10.1111/plb.12083
Subject(s) - biology , gene duplication , gene , endonuclease , phylogenetic tree , genetics , dna repair , dna , function (biology) , phylogenetics , computational biology
Unlike bacteria and mammals, plant DNA repair pathways are not well characterised, especially in monocots. The understanding of these processes in the plant cell is of major importance, since they may be directly involved in plant acclimation and adaptation to stressful environments. Hence, two sugarcane EST s were identified as homologues of AP endonuclease from the base‐excision repair pathway: Sc ARP 1 and Sc ARP 3. In order to understand their probable function and evolutionary origin, structural and phylogenetic studies were performed using bioinformatics approaches. The two predicted proteins present a considerable amino acid sequence similarity, and molecular modelling procedures indicate that both are functional, since the main structural motifs remain conserved. However, inspection of the sort signal regions on the full‐length c DNA s indicated that these proteins have a distinct organelle target. Furthermore, variances in their promoter cis‐element motifs were also found. Although the m RNA expression pattern was similar, there were significant differences in their expression levels. Taken together, these data raise the hypothesis that the Sc ARP is an example of a probable gene duplication event that occurred before monocotyledon/dicotyledon segregation, followed by a sub‐functionalisation event in the P oaceae, leading to new intracellular targeting and different expression levels.