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Article Abstract

The cell wall is a crucial feature that allows ancestral streptophyte green algae to colonize land. Expansin, an extracellular protein that mediates cell wall loosening in a pH-dependent manner, could be a powerful tool for studying cell wall evolution. However, the evolutionary trajectory of the expansin family remains largely unknown. Here, we conducted a comprehensive identification of 2461 expansins across 64 sequenced species, ranging from aquatic algae to terrestrial plants. Expansins originated in chlorophyte algae and may have conferred the ability to loosen cell walls. The four expansin subfamilies originated independently: -expansin appeared first, followed by -expansin, and then expansin-like A and expansin-like B, reflecting the evolutionary complexity of plant expansins. Whole genome duplication/segmental duplication and tandem duplication events greatly contributed to expanding the expansin family. Despite notable changes in sequence characteristics, the intron distribution pattern remained relatively conserved among different subfamilies. Phylogenetic analysis divided all the expansins into five clades, with genes from the same subfamily tending to cluster together. Transcriptome data from 16 species across ten lineages and qRT-PCR analysis revealed varying expression patterns of genes, suggesting functional conservation and diversification during evolution. This study enhances our understanding of the evolutionary conservation and dynamics of the expansin family in plants, providing insight into their roles as cell wall-loosening factors.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11547041PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/ijms252111814DOI Listing

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