Gauging the trends of pseudogenes in plants

Crit Rev Biotechnol. 2021 Nov;41(7):1114-1129. doi: 10.1080/07388551.2021.1901648. Epub 2021 May 17.

Abstract

Pseudogenes, the debilitated parts of ancient genes, were previously scrapped off as junk or discarded genes with no functional significance. Pseudogenes have come under scrutiny for their functionality, since recent studies have unveiled their importance in the regulation of their corresponding parent genes and various biological mechanisms. Despite the enormous occurrence of pseudogenes in plants, the lack of experimental validation has contributed toward their unresolved roles in gene regulation. Contrarily, most of the studies associated with gene regulation have been mainly reported for humans, mice, and other mammalian genomes. Consequently, in order to present a cumulative report on plant-based pseudogenes research, an attempt has been made to assemble multiple studies presenting the pseudogene classification, the prediction and the determination of comparative accuracies of various computational pipelines, and recent trends in analyzing their biological functions, and regulatory mechanisms. This review represents the classical, as well as the recent advances on pseudogene identification and their potential roles in transcriptional regulation, which could possibly invigorate the quality of genome annotation, evolutionary analysis, and complexity surrounding the regulatory pathways in plants. Thus, when the ambiguous boundary girdling the pseudogenes eventually recedes on account of their explicit orchestration role, research in flora would no longer saunter compared to that on fauna.

Keywords: Pseudogenes; noncoding genome; nonsynonymous substitutions; pseudogene characterization; pseudogene databases; pseudogene pipelines; synonymous substitutions.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Animals
  • Biological Evolution
  • Gene Expression Regulation
  • Genome*
  • Mice
  • Pseudogenes* / genetics