Figure S1.tif from A new insight into the evolution and functional divergence of <i>FRK</i> genes in <i>Pyrus bretschneideri</i>
Yunpeng Cao
Shumei Li
Yahui Han
Dandan Meng
Chunyan Jiao
Muhammad Abdullah
Dahui Li
Qing Jin
Yi Lin
Yongping Cai
10.6084/m9.figshare.6741086.v1
https://rs.figshare.com/articles/figure/Figure_S1_tif_from_A_new_insight_into_the_evolution_and_functional_divergence_of_i_FRK_i_genes_in_i_Pyrus_bretschneideri_i_/6741086
In plants, plant fructokinases (FRKs) are considered to be the main gateway of fructose metabolism as they can phosphorylate fructose to fructose-6-phosphate. Chinese white pears are one of the popular fruits in the world market; sugar content is an important factor affecting the quality of the fruit. We identified 49 <i>FRKs</i> from four Rosaceae species; 20 of these sequences were from Chinese white pear. Subsequently, phylogenic relationship, gene structure and micro-collinearity were analysed. Phylogenetic and exon–intron analysis classified these <i>FRK</i>s into 10 subfamilies, and was aimed further to reveal the variation of the gene structure and the evolutionary relationship of this gene family. Remarkably, gene expression patterns in different tissues or different development stages of the pear fruit suggested functional redundancy for <i>PbFRKs</i> derived from segmental duplication or genome-wide duplication and sub-functionalization for some of them. Additionally, <i>PbFRK11</i>, <i>PbFRK13</i> and <i>PbFRK16</i> were found to play important roles in regulating the sugar content in the fruit. Overall, this study provided important insights into the evolution of the <i>FRK</i> gene family in four Rosaceae species, and highlighted its roles in both pear tissues and fruits. Results presented here provide the appropriate candidate of <i>PbFRK</i>s that might contribute to fructose efflux in the pear fruit.
2018-07-04 08:41:41
FRK
pear
micro-synteny
gene duplication
expression