Authors
Ivan Baxter, Jason Tchieu, Michael R Sussman, Marc Boutry, Michael G Palmgren, Michael Gribskov, Jeffrey F Harper, Kristian B Axelsen
Publication date
2003/6/1
Journal
Plant physiology
Volume
132
Issue
2
Pages
618-628
Publisher
American Society of Plant Biologists
Description
Members of the P-type ATPase ion pump superfamily are found in all three branches of life. Forty-six P-type ATPase genes were identified in Arabidopsis, the largest number yet identified in any organism. The recent completion of two draft sequences of the rice (Oryza sativa) genome allows for comparison of the full complement of P-type ATPases in two different plant species. Here, we identify a similar number (43) in rice, despite the rice genome being more than three times the size of Arabidopsis. The similarly large families suggest that both dicots and monocots have evolved with a large preexisting repertoire of P-type ATPases. Both Arabidopsis and rice have representative members in all five major subfamilies of P-type ATPases: heavy-metal ATPases (P1B), Ca2  +-ATPases (endoplasmic reticulum-type Ca2  +-ATPase and autoinhibited Ca2  +-ATPase, P2A and P2B), H+-ATPases (autoinhibited H …
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