Functional Divergence in Orthologous Transcription Factors: Insights from AtCBF2/3/1 and OsDREB1C

直系同源转录因子的功能分歧:从 AtCBF2/3/1 和 OsDREB1C 看

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作者:Deyin Deng, Yixin Guo, Liangyu Guo, Chengyang Li, Yuqi Nie, Shuo Wang, Wenwu Wu

Abstract

Despite traditional beliefs of orthologous genes maintaining similar functions across species, growing evidence points to their potential for functional divergence. C-repeat binding factors/dehydration-responsive element binding protein 1s (CBFs/DREB1s) are critical in cold acclimation, with their overexpression enhancing stress tolerance but often constraining plant growth. In contrast, a recent study unveiled a distinctive role of rice OsDREB1C in elevating nitrogen use efficiency (NUE), photosynthesis, and grain yield, implying functional divergence within the CBF/DREB1 orthologs across species. Here, we delve into divergent molecular mechanisms of OsDREB1C and AtCBF2/3/1 by exploring their evolutionary trajectories across rice and Arabidopsis genomes, regulatomes, and transcriptomes. Evolutionary scrutiny shows discrete clades for OsDREB1C and AtCBF2/3/1, with the Poaceae-specific DREB1C clade mediated by a transposon event. Genome-wide binding profiles highlight OsDREB1C's preference for GCCGAC compared to AtCBF2/3/1's preference for A/GCCGAC, a distinction determined by R12 in the OsDREB1C AP2/ERF domain. Cross-species multiomic analyses reveal shared gene orthogroups (OGs) and underscore numerous specific OGs uniquely bound and regulated by OsDREB1C, implicated in NUE, photosynthesis, and early flowering, or by AtCBF2/3/1, engaged in hormone and stress responses. This divergence arises from gene gains/losses (∼16.7% to 25.6%) and expression reprogramming (∼62.3% to 66.2%) of OsDREB1C- and AtCBF2/3/1-regulated OGs during the extensive evolution following the rice-Arabidopsis split. Our findings illustrate the regulatory evolution of OsDREB1C and AtCBF2/3/1 at a genomic scale, providing insights on the functional divergence of orthologous transcription factors following gene duplications across species.

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