| Literature DB >> 31639183 |
Xiaoqing Liu1, Weirui Fu1, Yiwei Tang1, Wenju Zhang1, Zhiping Song1, Linfeng Li1, Ji Yang1, Hong Ma2,3, Jianhua Yang4, Chan Zhou5, Charles C Davis6, Yuguo Wang1.
Abstract
The plastid genomes (plastomes) of non-photosynthetic plants generally undergo gene loss and pseudogenization. Despite massive plastomes reported in different parasitism types of the broomrape family (Orobanchaceae), more plastomes representing different degradation patterns in a single genus are expected to be explored. Here, we sequence and assemble the complete plastomes of three holoparasitic Cistanche species (C. salsa, C. mongolica, and C. sinensis) and compare them with the available plastomes of Orobanchaceae. We identified that the diverse degradation trajectories under purifying selection existed among three Cistanche clades, showing obvious size differences in the entire plastome, long single copy region, and non-coding region, and different patterns of the retention/loss of functional genes. With few exceptions of putatively functional genes, massive plastid fragments, which have been lost and transferred into the mitochondrial or nuclear genomes, are non-functional. In contrast to the equivalents of the Orobanche species, some plastid-derived genes with diverse genomic locations are found in Cistanche. The early and initially diverged clades in different genera such as Cistanche and Aphyllon possess obvious patterns of plastome degradation, suggesting that such key lineages should be considered prior to comparative analysis of plastome evolution, especially in the same genus.Entities:
Keywords: zzm321990 Cistanchezzm321990 ; degradation; gene loss; intracellular gene transfer; plastome; pseudogenization
Mesh:
Year: 2020 PMID: 31639183 DOI: 10.1093/jxb/erz456
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Exp Bot ISSN: 0022-0957 Impact factor: 6.992