Fig. 1: Phylogenetic tree of Solanum lycopersicum aspartic proteases (APs) and known APs in other species. | npj Science of Plants

Fig. 1: Phylogenetic tree of Solanum lycopersicum aspartic proteases (APs) and known APs in other species.

From: Tomato aspartic proteinases harbouring PSI domains reveal stress responsiveness, organ specificity, and conserved features

Fig. 1: Phylogenetic tree of Solanum lycopersicum aspartic proteases (APs) and known APs in other species.The alternative text for this image may have been generated using AI.

Phylogenetic tree of 58 S. lycopersicum APs and known APs such as C. cardunculus cardosin A and cardosin B (purple), A. thaliana AtAP A1 (orange), H. vulgare phytepsin (pink), S. tuberosum StAP (brown), G. max soyAP1 and soyAP2 (blue), C. vulgare cirsin (red), and C. reinhardtii chlapsin (green). PSI-containing APs in S. lycopersicum (AP V, AP W, AP X, AP Y, and AP Z) are highlighted in bold. The phylogenetic tree was obtained with MEGA-X22 using the Maximum Likelihood method and the JTT matrix-based model23. The percentage of replicate trees in which the associated taxa clustered together in the bootstrap test (1000 replicates) is shown next to the branches. This analysis involved 67 amino acid sequences, with a total of 1485 positions in the final dataset.

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