학술논문

Diversity of ABC transporter genes across the plant kingdom and their potential utility in biotechnology
Document Type
article
Source
BMC Biotechnology. 16(1)
Subject
Genetics
Biotechnology
ATP-Binding Cassette Transporters
Chromosome Mapping
Data Mining
Databases
Protein
Genes
Plant
Genetic Variation
Genome
Plant
Plant Proteins
Plants
Species Specificity
ABC transporter
Transcriptomics
Computational biology
Taxonomic diversity
Biological Sciences
Technology
Language
Abstract
BackgroundThe ATP-binding cassette (ABC) transporter gene superfamily is ubiquitous among extant organisms and prominently represented in plants. ABC transporters act to transport compounds across cellular membranes and are involved in a diverse range of biological processes. Thus, the applicability to biotechnology is vast, including cancer resistance in humans, drug resistance among vertebrates, and herbicide and other xenobiotic resistance in plants. In addition, plants appear to harbor the highest diversity of ABC transporter genes compared with any other group of organisms. This study applied transcriptome analysis to survey the kingdom-wide ABC transporter diversity in plants and suggest biotechnology applications of this diversity.ResultsWe utilized sequence similarity-based informatics techniques to infer the identity of ABC transporter gene candidates from 1295 phylogenetically-diverse plant transcriptomes. A total of 97,149 putative (approximately 25 % were full-length) ABC transporter gene members were identified; each RNA-Seq library (plant sample) had 88 ± 30 gene members. As expected, simpler organisms, such as algae, had fewer unique members than vascular land plants. Differences were also noted in the richness of certain ABC transporter subfamilies. Land plants had more unique ABCB, ABCC, and ABCG transporter gene members on average (p