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Background: Nitrogen is a crucial nutrient that is both essential and rate limiting for plant growth and seed production. Glutamine synthetase (GS), occupies a central position in nitrogen assimilation and recycling, justifying the extensive number of studies that have been dedicated to this enzyme from several plant sources. All plants species studied to date have been reported as containing a single, nuclear gene encoding a plastid located GS isoenzyme per haploid genome. This study reports the existence of a second nuclear gene encoding a plastid located GS in Medicago truncatula.
Results: This study characterizes a new, second gene encoding a plastid located glutamine synthetase (GS2) in M. truncatula. The gene encodes a functional GS isoenzyme with unique kinetic properties, which is exclusively expressed in developing seeds. Based on molecular data and the assumption of a molecular clock, it is estimated that the gene arose from a duplication event that occurred about 10 My ago, after legume speciation and that duplicated sequences are also present in closely related species of the Vicioide subclade. Expression analysis by RT-PCR and western blot indicate that the gene is exclusively expressed in developing seeds and its expression is related to seed filling, suggesting a specific function of the enzyme associated to legume seed metabolism. Interestingly, the gene was found to be subjected to alternative splicing over the first intron, leading to the formation of two transcripts with similar open reading frames but varying 5' UTR lengths, due to retention of the first intron. To our knowledge, this is the first report of alternative splicing on a plant GS gene.
Conclusions: This study shows that Medicago truncatula contains an additional GS gene encoding a plastid located isoenzyme, which is functional and exclusively expressed during seed development. Legumes produce protein-rich seeds requiring high amounts of nitrogen, we postulate that this gene duplication represents a functional innovation of plastid located GS related to storage protein accumulation exclusive to legume seed metabolism.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2229-10-183 | DOI Listing |
Plant Cell Rep
September 2025
Key Laboratory of Germplasm Innovation for the Upper Reaches of the Yangtze River, Ministry of Agriculture and Rural Affairs, Chongqing, 400715, China.
The gene ZmDof08, which underlies the yellow-green leaf mutant phenotype in maize, enhances the activity of key enzymes involved in C photosynthesis, leading to a significant improvement in photosynthetic efficiency. Improving the photosynthetic efficiency of maize to increase its yield has long been a key focus in global agricultural research. Maize possesses a rich resource of leaf color mutants, which serve as valuable materials for studying leaf photosynthesis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
September 2025
MSU-DOE Plant Research Laboratory.
Light capture and photosynthetic energy conversion depends on photosynthetic complexes that are embedded within lipid membranes. Components of these complexes are vulnerable to damage by reactive oxygen species, byproducts of photosynthesis that accumulate under environmental stress. Here we explore the basis for a lipid-based sensing mechanism allowing plants or algae to assess and respond to damage to the photosynthetic membranes.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
August 2025
Department of Life Sciences, Gachon University, Seongnam, South Korea.
The evolutionary history of Euonymus L., within the Celastraceae family has been understudied. Within this genus E.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant Physiol
August 2025
Department of Biochemistry, University of Colorado, Boulder, CO 80309, USA.
Cyanobacteria have an inner and outer cell membrane enclosing the periplasm and cell wall and an additional set of internal membranes (called the thylakoid membranes) enclosing the thylakoid lumen. The periplasm and thylakoid lumen have unique proteomes, but the mechanisms regulating protein sorting to these locations have remained elusive. Here, proximity-based proteomics using the engineered peroxidase APEX2 was performed in the cyanobacteria Synechococcus sp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBMC Genomics
August 2025
National Key Laboratory for Tropical Crop Breeding/Key Laboratory of Gene Resources and Germplasm Enhancement in Southern China, MARA/Laboratory of Tropical Crops Germplasm Resources Genetic Improvement and Innovation of Hainan Province/Tropical Crops Genetic Resources Institute, Chinese Academy of
Unlabelled: Plant organellar genomes play a crucial role in metabolism and adaptation. In this study, the organellar genomes and transcriptome of (Nyctaginaceae) were sequenced and assembled using PacBio sequencing and strand-specific RNA sequencing, respectively. Structural and evolutionary comparisons of the plastidial and mitochondrial genomes (plastome and mitogenome) were conducted among and five other taxa within Caryophyllales to elucidate the similarities and divergences between these two organellar genomes at a detailed level.
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