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. 2011 Jul 21;62(14):5131–5147. doi: 10.1093/jxb/err214

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1.

Molecular phylogenetic analysis of the angiosperm GID1 receptor family reveals individual clustering into three groups: eudicot GID1ac, eudicot GID1b, monocot GID1. Translated protein sequences of 37 available GID1 full-length or near full-length cDNA sequences from different species were aligned into a phylogenetic unrooted tree as described in the methods. A. cepa=Allium cepa; A. deliciosa=Actinidia deliciosa; A. formosa=Aquilegia formosa; A. pubescens=Aquilegia pubescens; At=Arabidopsis thaliana; Lesa=Lepidium sativum; C. maxima=Cucurbita maxima; G. hirsutum=Gossypium hirsutum; G. max=Glycine max; H. vulgare=Hordeum vulgare; M. truncatula=Medicago truncatula; Os=Oryza sativa; P. trichocarpa=Populus trichocarpa; R. communis=Ricinus communis; S. bicolor=Sorghum bicolor; S. lycopersicum=Solanum lycopersicum; S. officinarum=Saccharum officinarum; T. aestivum=Triticum aestivum; V. vinifera=Vitis vinifera; Z. mays=Zea mays. Sequence accession numbers are listed in Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online. Note that, in addition to tomato, various other asterids (Lactuca and Helianthus species) have at least one GID1ac and one GID1b gene. They are listed in Supplementary Table S1 at JXB online, but were not included in the phylogeny as no full-length sequences are available. (This figure is available in colour at JXB online.)