Genome-wide identification and expression profile analysis of CCH gene family in Populus

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Abstract

Copper plays key roles in plant physiological activities. To maintain copper cellular homeostasis, copper chaperones have important functions in binding and transporting copper to target proteins. Detailed characterization and function analysis of a copper chaperone, CCH, is presently limited to Arabidopsis. This study reports the identification of 21 genes encoding putative CCH proteins in Populus trichocarpa. Besides sharing the conserved metal-binding motifMXCXXCand forming a βαββαβ secondary structure at the N-terminal, all the PtCCHs possessed the plant-exclusive extended Cterminal. Based on their gene structure, conserved motifs, and phylogenetic analysis, the PtCCHs were divided into three subgroups. Our analysis indicated that wholegenome duplication and tandem duplication events likely contributed to expansion of the CCH gene family in Populus. Tissue-specific data from PlantGenIE revealed that PtCCH genes had broad expression patterns in different tissues. Quantitative real-time RT-PCR (qRT-PCR) analysis revealed that PnCCH genes of P. simonii × P. nigra also had different tissue-specific expression traits, as well as different inducible-expression patterns in response to copper stresses (excessive and deficiency). In summary, our study of CCH genes in the Populus genome provides a comprehensive analysis of this gene family, and lays an important foundation for further investigation of their roles in copper homeostasis of poplar.

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Xu, Z., Gao, L., Tang, M., Qu, C., Huang, J., Wang, Q., … Yang, C. (2017). Genome-wide identification and expression profile analysis of CCH gene family in Populus. PeerJ, 2017(10). https://doi.org/10.7717/peerj.3962

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