| Literature DB >> 30715335 |
Young-Kee Kim1, Sangjin Jo1, Se-Hwan Cheon1, Min-Jung Joo1, Ja-Ram Hong1, Myoung Hai Kwak2, Ki-Joong Kim1.
Abstract
Cyrtosia septentrionalis is an achlorophyllous mycoheterotrophic orchid in the subfamily Vanilloideae (Orchidaceae). This article reports C. septentrionalis's complete plastome sequence and compare it with other orchid plastomes with a same mycoheterotrophic nutritional mode. The C. septentrionalis plastome has decreased to 96,859 bp in length, but it still maintains a quadripartite structure. The C. septentrionalis plastome contains 38 protein-coding genes, 25 tRNA genes, and four ribosomal RNA genes. Most genes related to photosynthesis have been lost, whereas the majority of housekeeping genes remain; this pattern corresponds to the end of stage 3 gene degradation. The inverted repeat regions of the C. septentrionalis plastome have decreased to 10,414 bp and mainly contain the gene ycf2. A block consisting of four rrn genes and rps7 and rps12 has shifted to a small single-copy region. As a result, the small single-copy region was found to be expanded, despite the loss of all ndh genes in the region. Three inversion mutations are required to explain the C. septentrionalis plastome's current gene order. The species is endangered, and these results have implications for its conservation.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Cyrtosia septentrionaliszzm321990 ; gene loss; gene relocation; inverted repeat contraction; mycoheterotrophy; plastome
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30715335 PMCID: PMC6390903 DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evz024
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Genome Biol Evol ISSN: 1759-6653 Impact factor: 3.416
. 1.—Plastid circle map of Cyrtosia septentrionalis. Pseudogenes are marked with the letter ¥. Three inversion regions along the C. septentrionalis plastome are marked on the circle map (A, 7.7-kb inversion; B, 1.4-kb inversion; C, 1.8-kb inversion).
. 2.—General features of Cyrtosia septentrionalis and 29 other orchid plastomes. All 21 of the decoded mycoheterotrophic orchid plastomes are included except Hexalectris warnockii, which was not available in the NCBI database. Species are organized by plastid size.
. 3.—Summary of gene content for Cyrtosia septentrionalis and 29 other orchid plastomes. Blue-colored boxes represent active genes, light blue-colored boxes indicate pseudogenes, and blank boxes denote loss of the gene. Species are organized by plastome size.
. 4.—Plastome alignment using progressive MAUVE including (A) Habenaria radiata (NC035834), (B) Vanilla planifolia (NC026778), and (C) Cyrtosia septentrionalis sequences. Inversions between C. septentrionalis and V. planifolia are indicated as a red letter with its size. Vanilla and Cyrtosia are phylogenetically closely related genera in the tribe Vanilleae, but are not sister group (Cameron 2004, 2009; Cameron and Carmen Molina 2006; Górniak et al. 2010).