RNA editing in mitochondria and chloroplasts of land plants alters transcript sequences by site-specific conversions of cytidines
into uridines. RNA editing frequencies vary extremely between land plant clades, ranging from zero in some liverworts to more
than 2,000 sites in lycophytes. Unique pentatricopeptide repeat (PPR) proteins with variable domain extension (E/E+/DYW) have
recently been identified as specific editing site recognition factors in model plants. The distinctive functions of these
PPR protein domain additions have remained unclear, although deaminase function has been proposed for the DYW domain. To shed
light on diversity of RNA editing and DYW proteins at the origin of land plant evolution, we investigated editing patterns
of the mitochondrial
nad5,
nad4, and
nad2 genes in a wide sampling of more than 100 liverworts and mosses using the recently developed PREPACT program (
www.prepact.de) and exemplarily confirmed predicted RNA editing sites in selected taxa. Extreme variability in RNA editing frequency is
seen both in liverworts and mosses. Only few editings exist in the liverwort
Lejeunea cavifolia or the moss
Pogonatum urnigerum whereas up to 20% of cytidines are edited in the liverwort
Haplomitrium mnioides or the moss
Takakia lepidozioides. Interestingly, the latter are taxa that branch very early within their respective clades. Amplicons targeting the E/E+/DYW
domains and subsequent random clone sequencing show DYW domains among bryophytes to be highly conserved in comparison with
their angiosperm counterparts and to correlate well with RNA editing frequencies regarding their diversities. We propose that
DYW proteins are the key players of RNA editing at the origin of land plants.
Keywords RNA editing – DYW-type PPR proteins – Mitochondria – Mosses – Liverworts – PREPACT