“…Each EF-hand motif contains two alpha helices that are connected by a 12 amino acid-residue loop (Yang and Poovaiah, 2003; Gifford et al, 2013). As is similar to what has been identified in animals, in which a single isoform of CaM is encoded by three separate genes (Fischer et al, 1988), multiple CaM genes encoding several CaM isoforms with only minor amino acid differences have been identified in several plants (McCormack and Braam, 2003; Boonburapong and Buaboocha, 2007; Gifford et al, 2013) including Arabidopsis (McCormack and Braam, 2003; Yang and Poovaiah, 2003; McCormack et al, 2005; Abbas et al, 2014), soybean (Sang et al, 1995; Heo et al, 1999; Gifford et al, 2013), pea ( Pisum sativum ; Oh and Roberts, 1990), petunia ( Petunia hybrid ; Rodriguez-Concepcion et al, 1999), rice ( Oryza sativa ; Phean-o-pas et al, 2005; Boonburapong and Buaboocha, 2007), tobacco ( Nicotiana tabacum ; Oh and Yun, 1999), and aloes leaf ( Aquilaria microcarpa ; Kurosaki and Taura, 2015). Evidence has accumulated supporting the theory that the presence of multiple diverged CaM isoforms may have distinct and significant functions, although gene redundancy cannot be ruled out as of yet.…”