Exon shuffling potentiates a diverse repertoire of brown algal NB‐ARC‐TPR candidate immune receptor proteins via alternative splicing

Author:

Teng Linhong1ORCID,Liang Miao1,Wang Chenghui1,Li Yan1,Urbach Jonathan M.2,Kobe Bostjan3,Xing Qikun4,Han Wentao5,Ye Naihao5ORCID

Affiliation:

1. College of Life Sciences Dezhou University Dezhou 253023 China

2. Ragon Institute 400 Technology Square Cambridge Massachusetts 02139 USA

3. School of Chemistry and Molecular Biosciences, Institute for Molecular Bioscience and Australian Infectious Diseases Research Centre University of Queensland Brisbane Queensland 4072 Australia

4. Department of Marine Science Incheon National University Incheon 22012 South Korea

5. National Key Laboratory of Mariculture Biobreeding and Sustainable Goods Yellow Sea Fisheries Research Institute, Chinese Academy of Fishery Sciences Qingdao 266071 China

Abstract

SUMMARYLike other organisms, brown algae are subject to diseases caused by bacteria, fungi, and viruses. Brown algal immunity mechanisms are not well characterized; however, there is evidence suggesting that pathogen receptors exist in brown algae. One key protein family likely associated with brown algal innate immunity possesses an NB‐ARC domain analogous to innate immune proteins in plants and animals. In this study, we conducted an extensive survey of NB‐ARC genes in brown algae and obtained insights into the domain organization and evolutionary history of the encoded proteins. Our data show that brown algae possess an ancient NB‐ARC‐tetratricopeptide repeat (NB‐TPR) domain architecture. We identified an N‐terminal effector domain, the four‐helix bundle, which was not previously found associated with NB‐ARC domains. The phylogenetic tree including NB‐ARC domains from all kingdoms of life suggests the three clades of brown algal NB‐TPRs are likely monophyletic, whereas their TPRs seem to have distinct origins. One group of TPRs exhibit intense exon shuffling, with various alternative splicing and diversifying selection acting on them, suggesting exon shuffling is an important mechanism for evolving ligand‐binding specificities. The reconciliation of gene duplication and loss events of the NB‐ARC genes reveals that more independent gene gains than losses have occurred during brown algal evolution, and that tandem duplication has played a major role in the expansion of NB‐ARC genes. Our results substantially enhance our understanding of the evolutionary history and exon shuffling mechanisms of the candidate innate immune repertoire of brown algae.

Funder

Australian Research Council

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Cell Biology,Plant Science,Genetics

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