Duplication and Specialization of NUDX1 in Rosaceae Led to Geraniol Production in Rose Petals

Open Access
Authors
  • C. Conart
  • N. Saclier
  • F. Foucher
  • C. Goubert
  • A. Rius-Bony
  • S.N. Paramita
  • S. Moja
  • T. Thouroude
  • C. Douady
  • P. Sun ORCID logo
  • B. Nairaud
  • D. Saint-Marcoux
  • M. Bahut
  • J. Jeauffre
  • L. Hibrand Saint-Oyant
  • R.C. Schuurink ORCID logo
  • J.-L. Magnard
  • B. Boachon
  • N. Dudareva
  • S. Baudino
  • J.-C. Caissard
Publication date 02-2022
Journal Molecular Biology and Evolution
Article number msac002
Volume | Issue number 39 | 2
Number of pages 20
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Swammerdam Institute for Life Sciences (SILS)
Abstract
Nudix hydrolases are conserved enzymes ubiquitously present in all kingdoms of life. Recent research revealed that several Nudix hydrolases are involved in terpenoid metabolism in plants. In modern roses, RhNUDX1 is responsible for formation of geraniol, a major compound of rose scent. Nevertheless, this compound is produced by monoterpene synthases in many geraniol-producing plants. As a consequence, this raised the question about the origin of RhNUDX1 function and the NUDX1 gene evolution in Rosaceae, in wild roses or/and during the domestication process. Here, we showed that three distinct clades of NUDX1 emerged in the Rosoidae subfamily (Nudx1-1 to Nudx1-3 clades), and two subclades evolved in the Rosa genus (Nudx1-1a and Nudx1-1b subclades). We also showed that the Nudx1-1b subclade was more ancient than the Nudx1-1a subclade, and that the NUDX1-1a gene emerged by a trans-duplication of the more ancient NUDX1-1b gene. After the transposition, NUDX1-1a was cis-duplicated, leading to a gene dosage effect on the production of geraniol in different species. Furthermore, the NUDX1-1a appearance was accompanied by the evolution of its promoter, most likely from a Copia retrotransposon origin, leading to its petal-specific expression. Thus, our data strongly suggest that the unique function of NUDX1-1a in geraniol formation was evolved naturally in the genus Rosa before domestication.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msac002
Downloads
Duplication and Specialization of NUDX1 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
Permalink to this page
Back