Phylogenetic analysis and motif conservation of plant TERT proteins. a Alignment of conserved TERT motifs from plants and animals. Top panel: Diagram of TERT proteins. TERTs are large polypeptides that share nine functionally important motifs. Reverse transcriptase motifs are shown in light grey, and N-terminal telomerase specific motifs are shown in dark grey. Bottom panel: Alignment of conserved TERT motifs from plants and animals indicates a high degree of inter-kingdom conservation. Asterisks denote amino acid positions that differ in AtTERT relative to other TERTs. Arrows denote amino acids predicted to play a role in the synthesis of human-type telomeric repeat in some Asparagales species [51]. Abbreviations: Cp, Carica papaya; At, Arabidopsis thaliana; Pt, Populus trichocarpa (poplar); Vv, Vitis vinifera (grapevine); Sc, Scilla peruviana; It, Iris tectorum; De, Doryanthes excelsa; Zm, Zea mays (maize); Os, Oryza sativa (rice); Sm, Selaginella moellendorffii; Ol, Ostreococcus lucimarinus; Ot, Ostreococcus tauri; Cf, Canis familiaris (dog); Mm, Mus musculus (mouse), Xl, Xenopus laevis. (B) Phylogenetic tree of plant TERTs. Vertebrate sequences from humans (hTERT), dog (CfTERT), mouse (MmTERT) and frog (XlTERT) were used as outgroups. Brackets on the right indicate species with common taxonomic positions. The tree was constructed by the neighbor-joining method after sequence alignment of TERT proteins from plants and animals. Numbers at each node indicate the percentage of 10,000 bootstrap replicates for statistical support