Literature DB >> 18059539

Characterization of Coffea chloroplast microsatellites and evidence for the recent divergence of C. arabica and C. eugenioides chloroplast genomes.

Kassahun Tesfaye1, Thomas Borsch, Kim Govers, Endashaw Bekele.   

Abstract

Comparative sequencing of >7 kb of highly variable chloroplast genome regions (atpB-rbcL, trnS-trnG, rpl22-rps19, and rps19-rpl2 spacers; introns in atpF, trnG, trnK, and rpl16) with microsatellites known from other angiosperms was carried out in Coffea. Samples comprised 8 diploid species of Coffea, 5 individuals of tetraploid C. arabica representing geographically distant wild populations from Ethiopia, 2 commercial cultivars of C. arabica, and Psilanthus leroyi and Ixora coccinea as outgroups. Phylogeny reconstruction using maximum parsimony and Bayesian inference resulted in congruent topologies with high support for C. arabica and C. eugenioides being sisters. Partitioned analyses showed that all regions except the atpB-rbcL spacer resolved this sister-group, although this was often unsupported. The large sequence data set further shows that chloroplast genomes of C. arabica and C. eugenioides each possess apomorphies, indicating that not C. eugenioides but an ancestor or close relative of C. eugenioides is the maternal parent of C. arabica. Seven variable chloroplast microsatellites were characterized in Coffea. Most microsatellites are poly(A/T) stretches, whereas one in the trnS-trnG spacer has an (AT)n motif. Most strikingly, all individuals of C. arabica possess identical sequences, suggesting a single chloroplast haplotype. This can be explained by a recent origin of C. arabica in a unique allopolyploidization event, or by severe bottleneck effects in the evolutionary history of the species. Reconstruction of the evolution of microstructural mutations shows much higher levels of homoplasy in microsatellite loci than in other parts of spacers and introns. Microsatellites are inferred to evolve by insertion and deletion of 1 to 3 motif copies in one step.

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Year:  2007        PMID: 18059539     DOI: 10.1139/G07-088

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Genome        ISSN: 0831-2796            Impact factor:   2.166


  9 in total

1.  Genetic structure and diversity of coffee (Coffea) across Africa and the Indian Ocean islands revealed using microsatellites.

Authors:  Norosoa J Razafinarivo; Romain Guyot; Aaron P Davis; Emmanuel Couturon; Serge Hamon; Dominique Crouzillat; Michel Rigoreau; Christine Dubreuil-Tranchant; Valerie Poncet; Alexandre De Kochko; Jean-Jacques Rakotomalala; Perla Hamon
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2012-12-28       Impact factor: 4.357

2.  Bacterial leaf symbiosis in angiosperms: host specificity without co-speciation.

Authors:  Benny Lemaire; Peter Vandamme; Vincent Merckx; Erik Smets; Steven Dessein
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2011-09-07       Impact factor: 3.240

3.  Genetic diversity of arabica coffee (Coffea arabica L.) in Nicaragua as estimated by simple sequence repeat markers.

Authors:  Mulatu Geleta; Isabel Herrera; Arnulfo Monzón; Tomas Bryngelsson
Journal:  ScientificWorldJournal       Date:  2012-06-04

4.  Variability among the most rapidly evolving plastid genomic regions is lineage-specific: implications of pairwise genome comparisons in Pyrus (Rosaceae) and other angiosperms for marker choice.

Authors:  Nadja Korotkova; Lars Nauheimer; Hasmik Ter-Voskanyan; Martin Allgaier; Thomas Borsch
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-11-18       Impact factor: 3.240

5.  16-O-methylcafestol is present in ground roast Arabica coffees: Implications for authenticity testing.

Authors:  Yvonne Gunning; Marianne Defernez; Andrew D Watson; Niles Beadman; Ian J Colquhoun; Gwénaëlle Le Gall; Mark Philo; Hollie Garwood; David Williamson; Aaron P Davis; E Kate Kemsley
Journal:  Food Chem       Date:  2017-12-11       Impact factor: 7.514

6.  Use of a draft genome of coffee (Coffea arabica) to identify SNPs associated with caffeine content.

Authors:  Hue T M Tran; Thiruvarangan Ramaraj; Agnelo Furtado; Leonard Slade Lee; Robert J Henry
Journal:  Plant Biotechnol J       Date:  2018-04-13       Impact factor: 9.803

7.  Transcriptomic Leaf Profiling Reveals Differential Responses of the Two Most Traded Coffee Species to Elevated [CO2].

Authors:  Isabel Marques; Isabel Fernandes; Pedro H C David; Octávio S Paulo; Luis F Goulao; Ana S Fortunato; Fernando C Lidon; Fábio M DaMatta; José C Ramalho; Ana I Ribeiro-Barros
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2020-12-03       Impact factor: 5.923

8.  Shift in precipitation regime promotes interspecific hybridization of introduced Coffea species.

Authors:  Céline Gomez; Marc Despinoy; Serge Hamon; Perla Hamon; Danyela Salmon; Doffou Sélastique Akaffou; Hyacinthe Legnate; Alexandre de Kochko; Morgan Mangeas; Valérie Poncet
Journal:  Ecol Evol       Date:  2016-04-08       Impact factor: 2.912

9.  A single polyploidization event at the origin of the tetraploid genome of Coffea arabica is responsible for the extremely low genetic variation in wild and cultivated germplasm.

Authors:  Simone Scalabrin; Lucile Toniutti; Gabriele Di Gaspero; Davide Scaglione; Gabriele Magris; Michele Vidotto; Sara Pinosio; Federica Cattonaro; Federica Magni; Irena Jurman; Mario Cerutti; Furio Suggi Liverani; Luciano Navarini; Lorenzo Del Terra; Gloria Pellegrino; Manuela Rosanna Ruosi; Nicola Vitulo; Giorgio Valle; Alberto Pallavicini; Giorgio Graziosi; Patricia E Klein; Nolan Bentley; Seth Murray; William Solano; Amin Al Hakimi; Timothy Schilling; Christophe Montagnon; Michele Morgante; Benoit Bertrand
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-03-13       Impact factor: 4.379

  9 in total

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