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Copyright © 2006 Yoo et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. Phylogenetic diversification of glycogen synthase kinase 3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes in plants 1Department of Botany, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA 2The Natural History Museums and Botanical Garden, University of Oslo, P. O. Box 1172 Blindern, NO-0318 Oslo, Norway 3Florida Museum of Natural History and the Genetics Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA 4Department of Botany and the Genetics Institute, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA Corresponding author.Mi-Jeong Yoo: ymj/at/ufl.edu; Victor A Albert: victor.albert/at/nhm.uio.no; Pamela S Soltis: psoltis/at/flmnh.ufl.edu; Douglas E Soltis: dsoltis/at/botany.ufl.edu Received December 8, 2005; Accepted February 21, 2006. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited. This article has been cited by other articles in PMC.Abstract Background The glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3)/SHAGGY-like kinases (GSKs) are non-receptor serine/threonine protein kinases that are involved in a variety of biological processes. In contrast to the two members of the GSK3 family in mammals, plants appear to have a much larger set of divergent GSK genes. Plant GSKs are encoded by a multigene family; analysis of the Arabidopsis genome revealed the existence of 10 GSK genes that fall into four major groups. Here we characterized the structure of Arabidopsis and rice GSK genes and conducted the first broad phylogenetic analysis of the plant GSK gene family, covering a taxonomically diverse array of algal and land plant sequences. Results We found that the structure of GSK genes is generally conserved in Arabidopsis and rice, although we documented examples of exon expansion and intron loss. Our phylogenetic analyses of 139 sequences revealed four major clades of GSK genes that correspond to the four subgroups initially recognized in Arabidopsis. ESTs from basal angiosperms were represented in all four major clades; GSK homologs from the basal angiosperm Persea americana (avocado) appeared in all four clades. Gymnosperm sequences occurred in clades I, III, and IV, and a sequence of the red alga Porphyra was sister to all green plant sequences. Conclusion Our results indicate that (1) the plant-specific GSK gene lineage was established early in the history of green plants, (2) plant GSKs began to diversify prior to the origin of extant seed plants, (3) three of the four major clades of GSKs present in Arabidopsis and rice were established early in the evolutionary history of extant seed plants, and (4) diversification into four major clades (as initially reported in Arabidopsis) occurred either just prior to the origin of the angiosperms or very early in angiosperm history. Background The glycogen synthase kinase 3 (GSK3)/SHAGGY-like kinases are non-receptor serine/threonine protein kinases that are involved in a variety of signal transduction pathways [1]. In animals, they are involved in cell fate determination, in metazoan pattern formation, and in tumorigenesis [2-6]. In mammals, two enzymes, GSK3α and GSK3β, are involved in the regulation of glycogen metabolism [7], in stability of the cytoskeleton [8], and in numerous processes related to oncogenesis [9]. In Saccharomyces cerevisiae, the GSK3 homologs MCK1 and MDS1 play a role in chromosomal segregation [10], and in Schizosaccharomyces pombe the GSK3 homolog Skp1 regulates cytokinesis [11]. In contrast to the two members of the GSK3 family found in mammals, plants appear to have a much larger set of divergent GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes [12-28], with functions as numerous as in animals. Genetic and biochemical approaches indicate that different plant GSKs are involved in diverse processes, including signaling, development, and stress response. For example, the Arabidopsis SHAGGY-like protein kinase AtGSK1 complements the salt-sensitive phenotype of yeast calcineurin mutants [24]. In Medicago sativa, GSK3 (WIG) is activated by wounding [19]. Arabidopsis AtSK11 and AtSK12 participate in the regulation of flower patterning at several developmental stages [16]; both genes are expressed during perianth and gynoecium development. Cloning of the BIN2 (brassinosteroid-insensitive 2) locus, which is identical to UCU1 (ULTRACURVATA1) and DWF12 (DWARF12), revealed that ASKη (AtSK21) is involved in brassinosteroid signaling [25-28]. However, in contrast to the known functions of GSK in animals, much less is known about the specific functions of these genes in plants. Arabidopsis has ten different GSK genes [13,15-17,20,21,23]. The protein sequences of family members are highly conserved throughout the kinase domain. In contrast, the N- and C-terminal regions of the plant GSK genes are highly variable, consistent with observations that the various plant genes are involved in divergent biological processes. However, because the functional analyses of the plant GSK genes are based on mutant phenotypes or transcript expression levels [12-28], more precise analyses of mutant phenotypes without the N- and/or C-terminal regions are needed to determine whether the variable N- and C-terminal regions are related to the functional differences of plant GSK genes. Based on phylogenetic analyses of amino acid and cDNA sequences, Arabidopsis GSK genes have been grouped into four classes (I-IV) [13,15-17,21]. Besides Arabidopsis GSKs, GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes have been reported from the angiosperms Oryza sativa, Brassica napus, Medicago sativa, Petunia hybrida, Nicotiana tabacum, and Ricinus communis [14,15,18,19,22,23,29,30], all of which are highly derived monocot or eudicot species. No basal eudicots or basal angiosperm lineages, representing phylogenetically ancient groups, were included in any previous analyses. Furthermore, no phylogenetic analyses of plant GSK genes have included sequences from diverse green plant lineages. Thus, it is not clear when plant-specific GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinases diverged or what complement of GSK genes is present in basal angiosperms or indeed other land plants. Recently, the Floral Genome Project (FGP) research consortium [31] provided expressed sequence tag (EST) sequences of GSK genes for a number of basal angiosperms, including Amborella trichopoda and the water lily Nuphar advena [32]. These taxa are phylogenetically important because they represent the earliest-diverging lineages of extant flowering plants [e.g., [33-42]]. In this study we examined the diversification of the GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes in plants. Specifically, we (1) compared the structure of GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes in Arabidopsis and rice, and (2) addressed whether the diversity of GSK genes in Arabidopsis is unique to Arabidopsis or is more generally true of all angiosperms and all land plants. For example, if the diversification of the gene family predated or coincided with the origin of the angiosperms, then ESTs from basal angiosperm taxa should appear in all major clades identified in Arabidopsis. Likewise, if GSK gene diversity in plants is ancient, basal lineages of land plants, such as mosses, should also contain orthologs to the Arabidopsis genes. Alternatively, some gene lineages may have diversified since the origin of the angiosperms, or land plants, and will not contain sequences from all basal lineages. Results and discussion Gene structure and patterns of sequence evolution The structure of five Arabidopsis GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes was reported by Dornelas et al. [15]. We sought to obtain a more comprehensive view of the structure of these genes. To accomplish this, we used the complete genome sequences now available for Arabidopsis and rice [43,44]; we describe the gene structure of additional GSKs from Arabidopsis, as well as the structure of GSKs reported from rice. We followed the numbering scheme of Dornelas et al. [15] for numbering exons and introns. The structure of GSK genes in Arabidopsis and rice is highly conserved (Figure (Figure1).1
Most of the GSK genes have 12 exons interrupted by 11 introns, but there are some exceptions. AtSK12 does not contain intron 6, and AtSK21 does not possess introns 3 and 11. As a result, these two genes have the smallest number of exons among the GSKs we examined. In addition, AtSK31 and AtSK32 have one additional exon (located between exons 1 and 2) compared to most other members of the GSK gene family. In our phylogenetic analyses, these two genes from Arabidopsis appear together in a clade with a sequence from Oryza (Os10g37740), which also has one additional exon similarly located between exons 1 and 2. These results suggest that the presence of this additional exon in Arabidopsis and rice was inherited from a common ancestor, prior to the divergence of monocots and eudicots, suggesting that the addition of this exon was an ancient event that occurred early in the diversification of flowering plants or possibly prior to the origin of flowering plants. It would be interesting to determine whether other sequences from clade III (see phylogenetic results below) similarly have an extra exon. Tichtinsky et al. [23] reported that PSK6.2 and PSK7 from Petunia hybrida also have an additional exon between exons 1 and 2. However, genomic sequences are not available for other members of clade III. Recent studies demonstrate that the structure of three GSK genes from the moss Physcomitrella patens is very similar to that of Arabidopsis and rice [46]. The structurally variable 5' region of plant GSKs is composed of exons 1 and 2, and the catalytic domain is encoded by exons 3–10 [47]. The structurally variable 3' region typically comprises exons 11 and 12 (Figure (Figure11 The length of the GSK genes in Arabidopsis ranges from 2135 bp (AtSK12) to 3558 bp (AtSK22), whereas the length ranges from 2341 bp (Os05g04340) to 6186 bp (Os06g35530) in rice. The large variation of gene length in rice is due to the presence of long introns (up to 2173 bp in Os06g35530) in some genes. Sequence analyses We investigated the patterns of nucleotide substitution across 116 plant-specific GSK homologs. This comparison provides a minimum estimate of change in a 4-position window. The substitution pattern of plant GSK homologs varied across the nucleotide sequences (Figure (Figure2).2
Changes at the first, second, and third codon positions varied substantially. Substitutions in third positions were much more frequent than those at first and second positions (Figure (Figure4).4
Phylogeny of GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase genes A total of 842 variable sites was found in the nucleotide sequences, 735 of which were parsimony-informative. Seventeen most parsimonious trees with a length of 11641 steps were obtained from the maximum parsimony (MP) analysis. The consistency index (CI) was 0.1522, and the retention index (RI) was 0.5789. In the amino acid analysis, 288 variable sites were detected, with 234 parsimony-informative; 77 most parsimonious trees of 2156 steps were obtained (CI = 0.4935; RI = 0.7532). The clades identified in the support-weighted tree based on nucleotide sequences (SW; Figure Figure5)5
The clades found in the Bayesian phylogenetic analysis based on nucleotide sequences are almost identical to those of the maximum parsimony tree based on the same data set. Therefore, the posterior probabilities are indicated on the maximum parsimony strict consensus tree (MP-N) (Figure (Figure66 In all four phylogenetic analyses, all of the land plant GSK sequences formed a clade distinct from non-plant sequences with high values of internal support as measured by bootstrap, posterior probabilities, and jackknife resamplings (Figures (Figures5,5 The trees from all four analyses recovered five major clades of sequences within land plants. One clade is composed only of sequences from the moss Physcomitrella (1.0 posterior probability, support values of 100%, 99%, and 72% from parsimony jackknifing mapped onto the SW tree, MP-N, and MP-AA, respectively), and the remaining four clades (I, II, III, and IV) correspond to the GSK subgroups recognized in Arabidopsis [13,15-17,21]. Relationships among these five clades varied among the analyses, but internal support was weak except in the Bayesian analysis. A large clade containing clades I, II, and III received a posterior probability of 0.90, and a clade including clades I and II had a posterior probability of 1.0 (Figure (Figure66 The MP-N tree (Figure (Figure6)6 Although we recovered four major clades that correspond to the four groups recognized in Arabidopsis by Dornelas et al. [15], relationships among and within these clades are generally not well supported based on analyses of either nucleotide or amino acid sequences (Figure (Figure5,5 Clade IV was supported most strongly, with 98% jackknife support (on the SW tree; Figure Figure5),5 Oryza sequences were included in the same four major clades with the Arabidopsis GSKs (Figures (Figures5,5 Clade IV includes AtSK41 and AtSK42 from Arabidopsis, plus sequences from other eudicots, monocots, and the basal angiosperms Persea americana and Nuphar advena. Nuphar advena 4 and 5 form a clade with 83% bootstrap support, appearing well separated from Nuphar advena 3 (Figure (Figure7).7 In clade III, two Pinus ESTs (Pinus taeda 3 and 4) were sister to all other sequences in both MP trees, but this relationship was weakly supported (<50%) even though the posterior probability was high (0.98). In addition, in the SW tree, these two Pinus sequences failed to form a clade (Figure (Figure5).5 Clade II contains the Arabidopsis sequences AtSK21, AtSK22, and AtSK23. The sequences from rice, wheat, and maize formed a clade with 77% bootstrap support in the MP-N analysis, 1.0 posterior probability, and 100% jackknife support mapped on the SW tree; this clade was not recovered in the MP-AA analysis. This clade also includes sequences from the basal angiosperms Persea and Nuphar in all trees and from Amborella in the MP-AA tree. Sequences from the eudicots Eschscholzia, Ricinus, and Cucumis are also included in clade II. Clade I contains the Arabidopsis sequences AtSK11 and AtSK12, which formed a sister pair in all analyses (Figures (Figures5,5 From an evolutionary standpoint, it is significant that ESTs from basal angiosperms were represented in all four major clades in all analyses (Figures (Figures5,5 There is a distinct monocot subclade in both clades II and IV, and most of the monocots form two or three subclades in clade I. These monocot-specific subclades are particularly evident in the MP-N tree (Figure (Figure6).6 Sequences of GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinases are also available for a fern and for several gymnosperms. An EST of the fern Ceratopteris appeared within clade I, as sister to a subclade that includes AtSK11 and AtSK12 in the MP-AA tree (Figure (Figure7).7 Conclusion The structure of GSK genes in Arabidopsis and rice is highly conserved, and most GSK genes have 12 exons interrupted by 11 introns. Genes included in the same clade based on parsimony analyses share similar structural characteristics. Our phylogenetic results indicate that the plant-specific GSK gene lineage was established prior to, or early in, the history of green plants, and plant GSKs began to diversify prior to the origin of extant seed plants. In addition, at least three of the four major clades of GSKs (I, III, IV) present in Arabidopsis and rice were established early in the history of extant seed plants. Sequences of basal angiosperms are present in all four of the major GSK clades, indicating that the fourth major subgroup of these genes (II) was established either early in angiosperm evolution or prior to the origin of the angiosperms (but after their last common ancestor with extant gymnosperms), if the absence of Clade II sequences from gymnosperms is real and not an artifact of limited sampling. In addition, our data indicate that GSK gene duplication events may have occurred in several of the basal angiosperms investigated, most notably Nuphar. Thus, duplication of GSK genes, which is prevalent in both Arabidopsis and rice, has also occurred in basal angiosperms. This phylogenetic analysis of numerous plant GSK sequences provides a framework for the investigation of the functional genetics of GSKs in signaling, development, and stress response. Methods Data retrieval A search for GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase homologs was performed using BLAST [58,59] at the websites of NCBI [60], TIGR [61], PlantGDB [62], Kazusa DNA Research Institute [63], and the FGP [31]. We started our search with 10 Arabidopsis and nine rice sequences, and then continued with various published GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase homologs from human, yeast, Drosophila, Brassica, Medicago, Petunia, Nicotiana, and Ricinus to identify as many GSK homologs as possible from protists, fungi, animals, and plants. Putative GSK homology was defined initially by sequence similarity when the sequences were retrieved and then confirmed by phylogenetic analysis (see below). A total of 139 GSK homologs was collected, of which 73 sequences were ESTs: 26 ESTs from 10 taxa at the FGP web site, 40 ESTs from 17 taxa at the PlantGDB web site, 5 ESTs from the NCBI web site (Ceratopteris and Pinus), and two ESTs from the Kazusa DNA Research Institute database (Clamydomonas and Porphyra). Some ESTs were integrated into a contig, which was constructed using the CAP3 Sequence Assembly Program [64], and therefore some gene designations have several accession numbers (Additional File 1). Of the remaining 66 sequences, 43 were previously reported land plant sequences, and 23 were sequences from protists, fungi, and animals (Additional File 1). Sequence alignment All sequences were translated into amino acid sequences using Se-Al [65]. The sequences corresponding to the catalytic domain (as defined by Hanks [47]; 285 amino acid residues corresponding to exon 3 to exon 10 in Arabidopsis; see Figure Figure1)1 Sequence analyses A series of analyses was conducted to explore the pattern of sequence evolution in GSK homologs. We investigated patterns of substitution across both nucleotide and protein sequences using the CHART option of MacClade 4.05 [66], using 116 plant-specific GSK homologs and Tree 1, selected arbitrarily from the phylogenetic analysis. This approach provides a minimum estimate of change for each site. Plotting of substitutions was conducted across a 4-bp or 4-amino acid interval on the x-axis. The analyses were conducted across the entire aligned sequences. We tested for variation in mean substitution rate among codon positions using the CHART option of MacClade 4.05, across the entire data set, within all green plants, within mosses, and within each of the four major clades of seed plant sequences identified by phylogenetic analyses. Phylogenetic analyses Maximum parsimony analyses were conducted with (i) equally weighted characters and character states and (ii) support weighting [67]. Equally weighted parsimony analyses for matrices of nucleotides and amino acids were conducted using PAUP* 4.0b10 [68]. The search strategy involved 100 random addition replicates with TBR branch swapping, saving all optimal trees. Gaps were treated as missing data. To assess support for each node, bootstrap analyses [69] were performed using 100 replicate heuristic searches, each with 10 random addition replicates and TBR branch swapping, saving all optimal trees. The support weighting method [67] provides an alternative approach to assessing internal support for phylogenetic results, by measuring the degree to which changes in a character (site) are concentrated in the supported branches of a tree. Jackknife resampling was used to generate randomly selected suites of initial weights for successive support weighting, providing a means of assessing the stability of branches supported in a standard parsimony jackknife tree [67,70]. We applied the support weighting method to the nucleotide data matrix. Support values mapped onto the support-weighted tree topology were generated by standard parsimony jackknifing [70] of the original data matrix using 1000 replicates with SPR branch swapping on each of 10 random data entry orders. A Bayesian phylogenetic analysis was performed using MrBayes 3.1.1 [71] to compare the tree topology and support values to those obtained from maximum parsimony analyses. The GTR + I + Γ model was selected by the Akaike information criterion (AIC) in ModelTest v.3.6 [72,73] and applied for the Bayesian analysis. Default parameter values were used for the priors. The analysis was run for 20 million generations, sampling trees every 1000 generations. The first 3000 trees produced during 3 million generations were discarded as burn-in, and the 50% majority-rule consensus of the remaining trees was used to obtain posterior probabilities. Two chains were run, and results from both chains were combined as convergence diagnostics indicated they had converged on similar results (the average standard deviation of split frequencies at 20 million generations was 0.062054). In previous phylogenetic analyses [13], mitogen activated protein kinase (MAPK) and cyclin-dependent kinase (CDK) sequences were shown to be the sister group to a clade of all GSK homologs. We analyzed plant MAPK/CDK/Casein kinase II/GSK sequences because these four kinases are included in the same group [74]. In an unrooted tree, GSK sequences formed a clade in which non-plant GSK homologs were sister to plant GSKs (tree not shown). As a result, we used non-plant GSKs as outgroups for analysis of all plant-specific GSK homologs. Authors' contributions M-JY carried out the sequence analysis, the equally weighted maximum parsimony analysis, and the Bayesian analysis, and with PSS and DES wrote the manuscript. VAA performed the support weighting analysis. PSS and DES supervised the project. All authors read and approved the final submission. Additional File 1 List of GSK3/SHAGGY-like kinase homologs used in this study. Some gene designations represent contigs constructed from multiple sequences and therefore have several accession numbers. Click here for file(36K, xls) Acknowledgements This research was supported by the Floral Genome Project (NSF PGR-0115684). We thank those members of the Floral Genome Project who contributed to tissue collection, library construction, and EST sequencing, especially Bill Farmerie and Kevin Holland of the UF Genome Sequencing Service Laboratory. We also thank David G. Oppenheimer, Matyas Buzgo, Sangtae Kim, Jin Koh, André Chanderbali, and Samuel Brockington for helpful comments and discussion, and Matt Gitzendanner for assistance with Bayesian analyses, and James S.Farris for access to the support weighting program. References
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