Goon-Bo Kim1, Chae Eun Lim2, Jin-Seok Kim2, Kyeonghee Kim2, Jeong Hoon Lee3, Hee-Ju Yu4, Jeong-Hwan Mun5. 1. Department of Bioscience and Bioinformatics, Myongji University, Yongin, 17058, Korea. 2. National Institute of Biological Resources, Incheon, 22689, Korea. 3. Department of Herbal Crop Research, National Institute of Horticultural and Herbal Science, Chungbuk, 27709, Korea. 4. Department of Life Science, the Catholic University of Korea, Bucheon, 14662, Korea. 5. Department of Bioscience and Bioinformatics, Myongji University, Yongin, 17058, Korea. munjh@mju.ac.kr.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Artemisia in East Asia includes a number of economically important taxa that are widely used for food, medicinal, and ornamental purposes. The identification of taxa, however, has been hampered by insufficient diagnostic morphological characteristics and frequent natural hybridization. Development of novel DNA markers or barcodes with sufficient resolution to resolve taxonomic issues of Artemisia in East Asia is significant challenge. RESULTS: To establish a molecular basis for taxonomic identification and comparative phylogenomic analysis of Artemisia, we newly determined 19 chloroplast genome (plastome) sequences of 18 Artemisia taxa in East Asia, de novo-assembled and annotated the plastomes of two taxa using publicly available Illumina reads, and compared them with 11 Artemisia plastomes reported previously. The plastomes of Artemisia were 150,858-151,318 base pairs (bp) in length and harbored 87 protein-coding genes, 37 transfer RNAs, and 8 ribosomal RNA genes in conserved order and orientation. Evolutionary analyses of whole plastomes and 80 non-redundant protein-coding genes revealed that the noncoding trnH-psbA spacer was highly variable in size and nucleotide sequence both between and within taxa, whereas the coding sequences of accD and ycf1 were under weak positive selection and relaxed selective constraints, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis of the whole plastomes based on maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference analyses yielded five groups of Artemisia plastomes clustered in the monophyletic subgenus Dracunculus and paraphyletic subgenus Artemisia, suggesting that the whole plastomes can be used as molecular markers to infer the chloroplast haplotypes of Artemisia taxa. Additionally, analysis of accD and ycf1 hotspots enabled the development of novel markers potentially applicable across the family Asteraceae with high discriminatory power. CONCLUSIONS: The complete sequences of the Artemisia plastomes are sufficiently polymorphic to be used as super-barcodes for this genus. It will facilitate the development of new molecular markers and study of the phylogenomic relationships of Artemisia species in the family Asteraceae.
BACKGROUND:Artemisia in East Asia includes a number of economically important taxa that are widely used for food, medicinal, and ornamental purposes. The identification of taxa, however, has been hampered by insufficient diagnostic morphological characteristics and frequent natural hybridization. Development of novel DNA markers or barcodes with sufficient resolution to resolve taxonomic issues of Artemisia in East Asia is significant challenge. RESULTS: To establish a molecular basis for taxonomic identification and comparative phylogenomic analysis of Artemisia, we newly determined 19 chloroplast genome (plastome) sequences of 18 Artemisia taxa in East Asia, de novo-assembled and annotated the plastomes of two taxa using publicly available Illumina reads, and compared them with 11 Artemisia plastomes reported previously. The plastomes of Artemisia were 150,858-151,318 base pairs (bp) in length and harbored 87 protein-coding genes, 37 transfer RNAs, and 8 ribosomal RNA genes in conserved order and orientation. Evolutionary analyses of whole plastomes and 80 non-redundant protein-coding genes revealed that the noncoding trnH-psbA spacer was highly variable in size and nucleotide sequence both between and within taxa, whereas the coding sequences of accD and ycf1 were under weak positive selection and relaxed selective constraints, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis of the whole plastomes based on maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference analyses yielded five groups of Artemisia plastomes clustered in the monophyletic subgenus Dracunculus and paraphyletic subgenus Artemisia, suggesting that the whole plastomes can be used as molecular markers to infer the chloroplast haplotypes of Artemisia taxa. Additionally, analysis of accD and ycf1 hotspots enabled the development of novel markers potentially applicable across the family Asteraceae with high discriminatory power. CONCLUSIONS: The complete sequences of the Artemisia plastomes are sufficiently polymorphic to be used as super-barcodes for this genus. It will facilitate the development of new molecular markers and study of the phylogenomic relationships of Artemisia species in the family Asteraceae.
The genus Artemisia L. is the largest group in the tribe Anthemideae of the family Asteraceae, consisting of approximately 500 species [1, 2]. Artemisia species are widely distributed in the temperate regions of the Northern Hemisphere, including Europe, Asia, and North America, and a few species are reported from the Southern Hemisphere [3-5]. Many Artemisia taxa have been used as food, forage, ornamental, or soil stabilizers [6]. Moreover, several Artemisia species are used as traditional medicinal herbs for their high accumulation of essential oils and terpenoids with anti-malaria, anti-cancer, and anti-diabetes effects. For instance, artemisinin isolated from A. annua is widely used against malaria [7].The center of origin and diversification of the genus Artemisia is Asia [8]. In East Asia, approximately 150 Artemisia species in two subgenera (subgenus Artemisia and subgenus Dracunculus) were described from East China, Korea, and Japan [9-11], many of which are used as supplements for medicinal or health purposes. For example, dried young leaves of different Artemisia species are collectively termed as Aeyeop (A. argyi, A. montana, and A. princeps), Haninjin (A. gmelinii), Cheongho (A. annua and A. apiacea), and Injinho (A. capillaris) in Korea [12]. To establish the taxonomic delimitation and phylogenetic relationships among the Artemisia taxa, a number of classical studies based mainly on the capitula type and floret fertility have been reported describing five subgeneric or sectional groups [Artemisia, Absinthium (Miller) Less, Dracunculus (Besser) Rydb., Seriphidium Besser ex Less., and Tridentatae (Rydb.) McArthur] [1, 5, 13]. However, taxonomic classification of Artemisia species has been controversial due to the insufficient diagnostic characters, highly variable morphological traits, potential natural hybridization among taxa, polyploidy, and nomenclatural legacy [1, 5, 8, 14–16]. Meanwhile, sequencing of nuclear and organelle genome regions, such as the external and internal transcribed spacer (ETS and ITS) of nuclear ribosomal DNA [8, 16, 17] and intergenic spacers between genes of chloroplast genome (plastome) [4, 18], has enabled molecular phylogenetic analyses of Artemisia. DNA markers widely applied to phylogenetic studies of Artemisia at the genus level include ITS, ITS2, psbA-trnH, matK, and rbcL. For example, the section Tridentatae, endemic to North America, was separated from the subgenus Seriphidium with strong support of ITS sequences [16, 19]. Recently, the subgenus Pacifica, including Hawaiian species, was recognized by nuclear ribosomal (ITS and ETS) and chloroplast (trnL-F and psbA-trnH) markers [20]. However, the resolution of these markers was insufficient to resolve taxonomic issues at the species level due to high sequence similarity of closely related taxa presumably caused by rapid radiation and hybridization [21-24]. Therefore, development of novel DNA markers or barcodes for investigation of Artemisia is an important challenge.Chloroplasts are multifunctional plant-specific organelles that carry out photosynthesis and have roles in plant growth and development, such as in nitrogen metabolism, sulfate reduction, and synthesis of starch, amino acids, fatty acids, nucleic acids, chlorophyll, and carotenoids [25]. Chloroplasts of the plant kingdom arose from a single ancestral cyanobacterium [26]. In general, the plastomes of most plants are 120–160 kilobases (kb) in length and have a quadripartite structure comprising a large single copy (LSC), a small single copy (SSC), and two inverted repeat (IR) regions. The small and relatively constant size, conserved genome structure, and uniparental inheritance of the plastome make it an ideal genetic resource for phylogenetic analysis and molecular identification of higher plants (reviewed in [27]). Several variable regions of the plastome have been developed as DNA barcode marker systems to identify taxa. The chloroplast DNA barcode markers generated for plants include coding sequences within the plastome such as matK, ndhF, rbcL, rpoB, and rpoC1 and the intergenic regions (IGRs) between atpF-atpH, psbK-psbI, and trnH-psbA [28, 29]. Of particular importance is a combination of rbcL and matK, which was recommended as a core barcode of land plants by the CBOL Plant Working group [28]. Additionally, ycf1a and ycf1b have been proposed as chloroplast barcodes due to their ease amplification by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and abundant variations in land plants [30].Recent advances in genome sequencing based on next generation sequencing (NGS) technologies and bioinformatics tools have increased the number of whole plastome sequences deposited in the public databases. This enables application of the plastome as a super-barcode for high-resolution phylogenetic analysis and species identification [31]. As of March 2020 (RefSeq Release 99), a total of 4718 chloroplast or plastid genomes of diverse species were deposited at the National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI) organelle genome database [32]. Among them, 11 plastomes of Artemisia species, A. annua L., A. argyi H. Lev. & Vaniot, A. argyrophylla Ledeb., A. capillaris Thunberg., A. frigida Willd., A. fukudo Makino, A. gmelinii Webb ex Stechmann, A. montana (Nakai) Pamp., and A. princeps Pamp. were included (Table 1). Comparative plastome analysis of these species identified mutational hotspots from intergenic spacer regions and showed that the genus Artemisia is a monophyletic genus and is a sister to the genus Chrysanthemum [40]. Additionally, the draft nuclear genome sequence of A. annua [2n = 2x = 18, 1.76 gigabases (Gb)/1C] covering 1.74 Gb was reported [41]. Although few chloroplast or nuclear genomes of Artemisia species are available, they are useful resources for studies of Artemisia and will enable the development of a novel Artemisia DNA marker system by comparative sequence analysis.
Table 1
Samples and assembly statistics of the Artemisia plastomes
Subgenus
Section
Scientific name
Nucleotide length (bp)
Number of genes
Reference or Vouchera
Genbank Accession
Total
LSC
SSC
IR
Protein
tRNA
rRNA
Artemisia
Abrotanum
A. annua
150,952
82,772
18,268
24,956
87
37
8
Zhang et al. 2017 (direct submission)
KY085890
A. annua
150,955
82,776
18,267
24,956
87
37
8
Shen et al. 2017 [33]
MF623173
A. annua
150,955
82,776
18,267
24,956
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000595661
MG951482
A. apiacea
151,091
82,830
18,343
24,959
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000538751
MG951483
A. freyniana f. discolor
151,275
82,965
18,344
24,983
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000538858
MG951487
A. fukudo
151,011
82,751
18,348
24,956
87
37
8
Lee et al. 2016a [34]
KU360270
A. fukudo
151,022
82,762
18,348
24,956
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000597993
MG951488
A. gmelinii
151,247
82,988
18,341
24,959
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592776
MG951489
A. gmelinii
151,318
83,061
18,339
24,959
87
37
8
Lee et al. 2016b [35]
NC031399
Absinthium
A. frigida
151,103
82,790
18,415
24,949
87
37
8
SRR8208356b
n.a.
A. frigida
151,076
82,740
18,396
24,970
87
37
8
Liu et al. 2013 [36]
NC020607
A. nakaii
151,020
82,760
18,348
24,956
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000598807
MG951494
A. sieversiana
150,910
82,710
18,304
24,948
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592824
MG951499
Artemisia
A. argyi
151,176
82,915
18,347
24,957
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592833
MG951484
A. argyi
151,192
82,930
18,348
24,957
87
37
8
Kang et al. 2016 [37]
NC030785
A. argyrophylla
151,189
82,927
18,348
24,957
87
37
8
Kim et al. 2017 (direct submission)
MF034022
A. feddei
151,112
82,878
18,322
24,956
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592740
MG951486
A. keiskeana
150,858
82,622
18,344
24,946
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592791
MG951492
A. montana
151,150
82,891
18,345
24,957
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000627850
MG951493
A. montana
151,130
82,873
18,343
24,957
87
37
8
Choi and Park, 2014 (direct submission)
NC025910
A. princeps
151,193
82,932
18,347
24,957
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592810
MG951495
A. rubripes
151,133
82,874
18,345
24,957
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592774
MG951496
A. selengensis
151,255
82,942
18,389
24,962
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000538775
MG951497
A. selengensis
151,261
82,948
18,389
24,962
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000595650
MG951498
A. selengensis
151,215
82,920
18,371
24,962
87
37
8
Meng et al. 2019 [38]
MH042532
A. stolonifera
151,144
82,878
18,350
24,958
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592785
MG951500
Dracunculus
Dracunculus
A. capillaris
151,020
82,790
18,306
24,962
87
37
8
Kim et al. 2017 (direct submission)
KY073391
A. capillaris
151,020
82,790
18,306
24,962
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592735
MG951485
A. capillaris
151,056
82,821
18,313
24,961
87
37
8
Lee et al. 2016b [35]
NC031400
A. dracunculs
151,042
82,811
18,317
24,957
87
37
8
SRR8208350c
n.a.
Latilobus
A. hallaisanensis
151,015
82,823
18,290
24,951
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000538771
MG951490
A. japonica
151,080
82,844
18,314
24,961
87
37
8
NIBRVP0000592828
MG951491
aVouchers were deposited at the National Institute of Biological Resources (Incheon, Korea)
b, cRaw sequence reads were downloaded from NCBI SRA database [39] and de novo assembled in this study
Samples and assembly statistics of the Artemisia plastomesaVouchers were deposited at the National Institute of Biological Resources (Incheon, Korea)b, cRaw sequence reads were downloaded from NCBI SRA database [39] and de novo assembled in this studyWe aimed to identify variable regions in the plastomes of the Artemisia taxa in East Asia to establish a molecular basis for the development of novel DNA barcode markers that can be widely applicable across the genus Artemisia as well as the family Asteraceae. We newly sequenced and assembled 19 plastomes of 18 taxa from two subgenera of Artemisia. Additionally, we de novo-assembled and annotated two plastomes using publicly available NGS reads. Combined with 11 previously reported Artemisia plastomes, we performed a comparative analysis of 32 Artemisia plastomes and identified highly variable regions in the Artemisia plastomes. Our results provide a robust genomic framework for taxonomic and phylogenomic characterization of Artemisia species in East Asia and the development of DNA markers that allow identification of individual taxa in a cost-effective manner.
Results
Structure and features of the Artemisia plastomes
A total of 32 complete plastomes from 21 Artemisia taxa were analyzed (Table 1). These taxa belong to the sections Abrotanum, Absinthium, and Artemisia of the subgenus Artemisia and the sections Dracunculus and Latilobus of the subgenus Dracunculus [5, 6, 11]. Among them, 19 plastomes from 18 taxa were newly sequenced and assembled in this study. To assemble the plastomes, we generated approximately 35.2 million Illumina MiSeq PE reads (10.6 Gb) on average per sample (Additional file 2: Table S1). De novo assembly of the Illumina reads using rbcL and rpoC2 of A. argyi (GenBank accession NC030785) as seed sequences resulted in the construction of a circular DNA sequence map for each sample. Additionally, the Sequence Read Archive (SRA) reads of A. dracunculus (SRR8208350) and A. frigida (SRR8208356) deposited in NCBI were de novo assembled into circular plastomes. The 21 de novo-assembled plastomes were verified by mapping of sequence reads affording 666-fold average coverage (296-fold to 1187-fold coverage). The remaining 11 plastomes from 9 Artemisia species were downloaded from NCBI. The structural orientation of the LSC, SSC, and IR regions of each assembly was analyzed by comparison with previously reported Artemisia plastomes. As a result, we obtained at least two independent plastome assemblies for each of eight species (A. annua, A. argyi, A. capillaris, A. frigida, A. fukudo, A. gmelinii, A. montana, and A. selengensis) and a single plastome for each of 13 taxa (A. apiacea, A. argyrophylla, A. dracunculus, A. feddei, A. freyniana f. discolor, A. hallaisanensis, A. japonica, A. keiskeana, A. nakaii, A. princeps, A. rubripes, A. sieversiana, and A. stolonifera).The de novo-assembled Artemisia plastomes were 150,858 bp (A. keiskeana) to 151,318 bp (A. freyniana f. discolor) in length with a 37.4–37.5% GC content, similar to previously reported Artemisia plastomes. They had a typical quadripartite structure consisting of 82,622–82,988 bp of LSC, 24,946–24,983 bp of SSC, and a pair of IRs, each of which was 18,267–18,389 bp (Fig. 1). Comparing with the plastome of Nicotiana tabacum (GenBank accession NC001879), all the Artemisia plastomes had two inversions (approximately 22 kb and 3.3 kb in length) in the LSC region that have been reported to be shared by all clades of the Asteraceae family (Fig. 1) [42]. Gene annotation showed that the Artemisia plastomes contained 87 protein-coding genes, 37 transfer RNAs (tRNAs), and 8 ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes in conserved order and orientation (Table 1). Comparison of plastome sequences from the same species, except A. capillaris (GenBank accession KY073391 and MG951485), identified three bp (A. annua) to 71 bp (A. frigida) length differences that are randomly distributed both in genic and non-genic regions. In every Artemisia plastome, the junctions between IRs and LSC and SSC were flanked by rps19 and ycf1, respectively (Additional file 1: Fig. S1). The IR border structure was conserved in Artemisia, except A. selengensis in which three independent plastomes have seven bp expansion in rps19 at the LSC/IR and SSC/IR junctions. In addition, unlike the reports of Meng et al. [38] and Shen et al. [33], ψrps19 was located at the IRb/LSC junction in all Artemisia plastomes. Seven protein-coding genes (ndhB, rpl2, rpl23, rps7, rps12, ycf2, and ycf15), four rRNA genes, and seven tRNA genes were duplicated in the two IRs. Moreover, 12 protein-coding genes and six tRNA genes had one or two introns (Additional file 2: Table S2). Of the total plastomes, protein-coding genes comprised 52.3% whereas rRNA and tRNA genes accounted for 6.0 and 1.9%, respectively. We found several annotation errors in the previously reported sequences. For example, two pseudogenes, ψycf1 and ψrps19, were newly identified in all of the plastomes and psbG in A. annua (GenBank accession MF623173) was an erroneous annotation.
Fig. 1
A circular gene map of the Artemisia plastomes. Circle 1 (from inside) indicates the GC content. The colored bars on circle 2 indicate protein-coding genes, tRNA genes, and rRNA genes. Genes are placed on the inside or outside of circle 2 according to their orientations. Functional categories of genes are presented in the left margin. IR, inverted repeat region; LSC, large single copy region; SSC, small single copy region
A circular gene map of the Artemisia plastomes. Circle 1 (from inside) indicates the GC content. The colored bars on circle 2 indicate protein-coding genes, tRNA genes, and rRNA genes. Genes are placed on the inside or outside of circle 2 according to their orientations. Functional categories of genes are presented in the left margin. IR, inverted repeat region; LSC, large single copy region; SSC, small single copy region
Identification of polymorphisms in the Artemisia plastomes
A sequence comparison of 32 Artemisia whole plastomes generated multiple aligned sequences of 153,229 bp in length. The alignment exhibited high pairwise sequence identities between plastomes of the same section, ranging from 99.2% (section Absinthium) to 99.8% (section Dracunculus) in whole plastomes and from 99.7% (section Absinthium) to 99.9% (section Dracunculus) in the protein-coding genes. Interestingly, the protein-coding genes of A. argyrophylla (GenBank accession MF034022) in section Artemisia and A. nakaii (GenBank accession MG951494) in section Absinthium showed 100% identity with those of A. argyi (GenBank accessions MG951484 and NC030785) in section Artemisia and A. fukudo (GenBank accessions KU360270 and MG951488) in section Abrotanum, respectively (Additional file 2: Table S3).A total of 2172 variable sites comprising 1062 singleton variable sites and 1110 parsimony informative (PI) sites (0.72%) were identified across the whole plastome alignment (Table 2). The overall nucleotide diversity (π) was 0.0024; however, each structural region of plastome showed different nucleotide diversities and PI sites; these were highest in SSC (π = 0.0047 and PI = 1.37%) and lowest in IR (π = 0.0006 and PI = 0.19%) regions. Based on DNA polymorphisms, the Artemisia plastomes could be divided into 30 chloroplast haplotypes along with 30 LSC, 26 SSC, and 23 IR haplotypes. Across the Artemisia plastomes, highly diverged regions were identified by calculating π values within 1 kb sliding windows with 100 bp steps (Fig. 2). In total, 11 peaks with π values higher than 0.006 were identified from the plastome. These regions included trnH-psbA, rps16, rps16-trnQ-UUG, trnE-UUC-rpoB, ndhC-trnV-UAC, rbcL-accD, and accD in LSC and ndhF-rpl32, rpl32-trnL-UAG, rps15-ycf1, and ycf1 in SSC regions (Additional file 2: Table S4 and S5). Sequence analysis of three highly diverged protein-coding genes (accD, ycf1, and rps16) revealed high polymorphisms (π > 0.006) in the coding sequences of accD and ycf1 and in the intron of rps16.
Table 2
DNA polymorphisms identified in the 32 Artemisia plastomes
Structural region
Alignment length (bp)
Number of variable sites
Nucleotide polymorphism
Polymorphic
Singleton
PIa
PI sites (%)
πb
Hc
Whole DNA
153,229
2172
1062
1110
0.72
0.0024
30
LSC
84,443
1501
742
759
0.90
0.0029
30
SSC
18,737
523
266
257
1.37
0.0047
26
IRd
50,049
148
54
94
0.19
0.0006
23
aParsimony informative; bnucleotide diversity; cnumber of haplotypes
dAlignments of two IR regions were combined and the 7 bp expansion in A. selengensis was included
Fig. 2
Sliding window test of nucleotide diversity (π) in the multiple alignments of the 32 Artemisia plastomes. Peak regions with a π value of > 0.006 were labeled with loci tags of genic or intergenic region names. π values were calculated in 1 kb sliding windows with 100 bp steps. LSC, large single copy region; IRa, inverted repeat region a; SSC, small single copy region; IRb, inverted repeat region b
DNA polymorphisms identified in the 32 Artemisia plastomesaParsimony informative; bnucleotide diversity; cnumber of haplotypesdAlignments of two IR regions were combined and the 7 bp expansion in A. selengensis was includedSliding window test of nucleotide diversity (π) in the multiple alignments of the 32 Artemisia plastomes. Peak regions with a π value of > 0.006 were labeled with loci tags of genic or intergenic region names. π values were calculated in 1 kb sliding windows with 100 bp steps. LSC, large single copy region; IRa, inverted repeat region a; SSC, small single copy region; IRb, inverted repeat region bFor 80 non-redundant protein-coding genes, a total of 68,062 bp sequences were multiply aligned. The overall nucleotide diversity of protein-coding genes (π = 0.0015) was approximately 1.6-fold lower than that of whole plastome (π = 0.0024). Notably, 17 genes had a higher π than the overall π value and showed an average 99.5% pairwise sequence similarity of coding sequences (Table 3). The PI sites of these genes comprised 39.2% (144 of 367 sites) of the total PI sites in all protein-coding genes. Of particular interest, accD, encoding the beta-carboxyl transferase subunit of acetyl-CoA carboxylase, and ycf1, encoding Tic214 of the TIC complex, showed lower sequence identity, higher nucleotide diversity, and a larger number of PI sites than the other genes, indicating a high level of sequence divergence. Additionally, ndhF and rpoC2 had more than ten PI sites; however, their π values were lower than 0.003. Therefore, two protein-coding genes, accD and ycf1, were identified as nucleotide diversity hotspots of the Artemisia chloroplast protein-coding genes, and have potential as candidate regions for the development of universal barcode markers.
Table 3
Evolutionary characteristics of 17 highly diverged protein-coding genes in the Artemisia plastome
Genea
Length of alignment (bp)
Avg. pairwise similarity (%)b
Identical sites (%)
π
H
Total variable sites
Singleton sites
PI sites
Ka/Ksc
ycf1
5076
98.96
94.2
0.0065
24
44
21
23
0.6674
accD
1572
98.7
92.8
0.0057
19
42
12
30
1.0568
infA
231
99.63
97.9
0.0037
7
5
2
3
0.0097
ndhE
303
99.63
98.4
0.0036
6
5
2
3
0.0295
rps8
402
99.67
98.5
0.0033
7
6
1
5
0.3830
ndhF
2223
99.7
98.5
0.0030
18
32
9
23
0.1783
psaC
243
99.71
98.4
0.0029
5
4
2
2
0
petD
480
99.71
98.3
0.0029
8
8
4
4
0.0112
rpl22
471
99.66
97.3
0.0027
9
7
3
4
0.1161
psbT
99
99.76
97.1
0.0025
4
3
3
0
0
rpl16
405
99.73
98.8
0.0022
6
5
1
4
0
rpl36
111
99.8
98.2
0.0020
2
2
0
2
0
matK
1515
99.52
97.6
0.0019
16
20
11
9
0.2803
rps3
654
99.69
98.3
0.0018
12
11
4
7
0.1808
psbK
177
99.67
98.9
0.0017
3
2
1
1
0.1924
rpoC2
4137
99.8
98.5
0.0017
22
56
36
20
0.3194
petB
645
99.78
98.8
0.0016
9
8
4
4
0
Overall
68,214
99.50
98.2
0.0015
28
769
402
367
0.1774
aGenes with > 0.2% average pairwise dissimilarity and > 0.0015 π values were selected
bCoding sequences were aligned using MUSCLE and translational alignment in Geneious Prime
cKa/Ks values (ω) were calculated according to Yang and Nielsen (2000) [43] using the yn00 program in the PAML 4 package
Evolutionary characteristics of 17 highly diverged protein-coding genes in the Artemisia plastomeaGenes with > 0.2% average pairwise dissimilarity and > 0.0015 π values were selectedbCoding sequences were aligned using MUSCLE and translational alignment in Geneious PrimecKa/Ks values (ω) were calculated according to Yang and Nielsen (2000) [43] using the yn00 program in the PAML 4 package
Variation and evolutionary selection of protein-coding genes
No gene loss was detected from the 32 Artemisia plastomes; however, single nucleotide insertion or deletion (InDel) mutations resulting in a premature stop codon were found in rpoA of A. montana (GenBank accession MG951493) and ycf1 of A. selengensis (GenBank accession MH042532), respectively. The frameshift caused by single nucleotide InDels generated truncated coding sequences, 816 bp instead of 1009 bp for rpoA of A. montana and 1290 bp rather than 5033 bp for ycf1 of A. selengensis. In A. sieversiana (GenBank accession MG951499), one SNP in ndhI induces an in-frame premature stop codon, resulting in loss of eight codons at the 3′-end of the open reading frame.Synonymous (Ks) and non-synonymous substitution rates (Ka) are useful for inferring the evolutionary tendency of genes. To evaluate differences in the selection and evolution of protein-coding genes in the Artemisia plastomes, the nucleotide substitution rates and average Ka/Ks ratio (ω) of 17 highly divergent genes were calculated. As shown in Table 3 and Fig. 3, 15 genes exhibited ω values less than 0.5, suggesting the action of high selective constraints or purifying selection. In contrast, the ω for ycf1 and accD was 0.67 and 1.06, respectively, suggesting that these genes are under relaxed selective constraints and weak positive selection, respectively. These results are consistent with reports that most genes in the Artemisia plastome evolve under negative selection; however, accD is under positive selection [38, 44]. The likelihood ratio test of the site-specific model in CodeML program validated the evolutionary selection patterns of accD and ycf1. The Bayes empirical Bayes (BEB) identified 8 amino acid sites from accD and ycf1, respectively, that were positively selected under posterior probability > 0.95 (Additional file 2: Table S6). In accD, six out of the eight positively selected amino acid substitutions were located near A. selengensis-specific insertions consisting of 6 codon sequences repeating three or four times (Additional file 1: Fig. S2). This region is a polymorphic hotspot of accD. In contrast, the positively selected amino acid substitutions in ycf1 were widely distributed across the coding sequences.
Fig. 3
Box-and-whisker plots of the Ka/Ks (ω) values of highly diverged protein-coding genes in the Artemisia plastomes. The pairwise ω values of 14 protein-coding genes in the 32 Artemisia plastomes were calculated and plotted. Box plots show the median (central line), mean (× symbol), first and third quartiles (top and bottom bars), and outliers
Box-and-whisker plots of the Ka/Ks (ω) values of highly diverged protein-coding genes in the Artemisia plastomes. The pairwise ω values of 14 protein-coding genes in the 32 Artemisia plastomes were calculated and plotted. Box plots show the median (central line), mean (× symbol), first and third quartiles (top and bottom bars), and outliers
Repetitive sequences in the Artemisia plastomes
Repeated DNA sequences in the plastome play a role in genome rearrangement and are useful for phylogenetic studies. We investigated simple sequence repeats (SSRs) and long sequence repeats (LSRs) in the multiple alignment of the 32 Artemisia whole plastomes (Table 4 and Fig. 4). A total of 431 SSR loci of short (2–6 bp) nucleotide motifs were discovered. Approximately 39.0% (168 of 431 loci) of SSR loci were in the protein-coding sequences. Moreover, only 27 SSR loci (6.2%) were polymorphic across the 32 plastomes; all were located in LSC and SSC, but none in IR, regions. In the Artemisia plastomes, di- and trinucleotide repeats were the most frequent, accounting for 72.2 and 18.4% of the total SSRs, respectively (Fig. 4a).
Table 4
Simple sequence repeats and long sequence repeats identified in the 32 Artemisia plastomes
Repeats
SSR
LSR
Structural region
LSC
SSC
IR
Total
LSC
SSC
IR
Total
Numbers
Overall
296
60
75
431
62
22
10
94
Polymorphic
22
5
0
27
37
12
3
52
Monomorphic
274
55
75
404
25
10
7
42
Genic region
CDS
109
25
34
168
10
7
2
19
Intron
39
5
10
54
3
2
0
5
rRNA/tRNA
8
0
9
17
0
0
0
0
Intergenic region
140
30
22
192
49
13
8
70
Fig. 4
Frequency of repetitive sequences in the Artemisia plastomes. a Frequency of SSRs with di- to hexa-nucleotide motifs. b Frequency of LSRs with 11–50 nucleotide repeat units
Simple sequence repeats and long sequence repeats identified in the 32 Artemisia plastomesFrequency of repetitive sequences in the Artemisia plastomes. a Frequency of SSRs with di- to hexa-nucleotide motifs. b Frequency of LSRs with 11–50 nucleotide repeat unitsA total of 94 LSRs were identified (Fig. 4b). Unlikely SSRs, more than half of them (55.3%) were polymorphic (Table 4). Among the polymorphic LSRs, those repeated twice (38 of 49) were most abundant. Palindromic and hairpin repeats were also found. LSRs were 2.3-fold as frequent in IGRs compared to genic regions. In each structural region, SSC region had the highest average density of LSRs per kilobase (1.4/kb), followed by LSC (1.2/kb) and IR (0.8/kb) regions. Most repeat units were less than 15 bp in length, which accounted for 81% of the total LSRs (Additional file 2: Table S7).
Phylogenetic analysis and delimitation of the Artemisia plastomes
Using 80 protein-coding genes and the complete plastome sequences, we performed phylogenetic analyses of the 32 Artemisia plastomes. The topology of the maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian inference (BI) trees based on protein-coding genes was nearly identical (Fig. 5 and Additional file 1: Fig. S3). Additionally, no significant differences between the trees in protein-coding genes and whole plastomes were found, except clustering of A. sieversiana (MG951499). The analyses discriminated 19 of 21 (90.5%) analyzed plastomes and divided the Artemisia plastomes into five clades of two subgenera. The subgenus level classification of Artemisia based on plastomes was in agreement to the previous studies inferred from different types of DNA markers [4, 8, 16, 18, 19, 45]. The plastomes of the subgenus Dracunculus clustered together in monophyletic clade VI whereas those of the subgenus Artemisia were clustered into four paraphyletic clades (clades I − III and V). In contrast, plastomes in the same section were divided into different clades, showing that the previous section level classifications of Artemisia species [5, 6, 11, 17] were weakly supported by the plastome trees. All plastomes from the same species clustered together. Moreover, most plastomes of different taxa were distinct, except A. argyi, A. argyrophylla, and A. princeps, which clustered together in clade I with a near-zero branch length. These three species showed 99.97–99.99% sequence similarity to the whole plastome (Additional file 2: Table S3). Similarly, A. nakaii clustered with A. fukudo as expected from the plastome sequence similarity (99.99%). This finding supports the hypothesis that a number of A. nakaii accessions are likely to be interspecific hybrid taxa and its maternal origin might be A. fukudo [46].
Fig. 5
Phylogenetic tree of Artemisia taxa based on 80 non-redundant protein-coding genes of the plastome. BI tree topology is shown and BI posterior probability/ML bootstrap values are indicated on the nodes. Branch lengths were estimated by BI analysis. Colored lines and braces at the right of the tree indicate section and subgenus names of Artemisia
Phylogenetic tree of Artemisia taxa based on 80 non-redundant protein-coding genes of the plastome. BI tree topology is shown and BI posterior probability/ML bootstrap values are indicated on the nodes. Branch lengths were estimated by BI analysis. Colored lines and braces at the right of the tree indicate section and subgenus names of Artemisia
Molecular markers for Artemisia and the Asteraceae species
A comparative sequence analysis revealed that accD and ycf1 are highly polymorphic in the Artemisia plastomes; therefore, these genes have potential for the development of Artemisia molecular markers. For accD, the 928 bp un-gapped alignment of the 1 kb region flanking the polymorphic hotspot was investigated as a molecular marker. For ycf1, we evaluated the potential utility of the Asteraceae ycf1 locus by reconstructing a phylogenetic tree based on the coding sequences of 211 ycf1 genes from Asteraceae whole plastomes in the NCBI nucleotide database. A ML tree constructed using the ycf1 genes showed that the Asteraceae species were divided into nine groups; in agreement with the tribe level taxonomic classification of the Asteraceae (Additional file 1: Fig. S4) [47-49]. The topology of a ML tree based on 212 Asteraceae accD genes was similar (Additional file 1: Fig. S5). However, the resolution was insufficient for species delimitation. BLAST search of accD and ycf1 against the Asteraceae plastomes revealed that these genes have higher tribe resolution (83.4% for accD and 99.1% for ycf1) than species resolution (42.4% for accD and 62.2 for ycf1). (Additional file 1: Fig. S6).To develop Artemisia molecular markers with increased resolution of phylogeny reconstruction, we tested the combination of accD and ycf1b, a candidate plastid barcode for land plants developed based on the ycf1 hotspot [30]. The accD marker is 928 bp in length (accD-1 k) and discriminated 19 Artemisia haplotypes (nucleotide diversity, π = 0.0077). Similarly, ycf1b is 847 bp in length and discriminated 18 haplotypes (π = 0.0080). The combination of accD and ycf1b (accD-1 k + ycf1b) increased the discriminatory power of the marker; 21 haplotypes were distinguished (π = 0.0080) (Table 5). The topology of the ML tree based on accD-1 k + ycf1b was similar to that of whole plastomes (Additional file 1: Fig. S7).
Table 5
Nucleotide diversity and discriminatory power of the Artemisia chloroplast markers
Loci
trnH-psbA
accD-hotspot
ycf1b
accD-1 k
ycf1b + accD-1 k
Length (bp)
357
276
847
928
1775
Number of sequence
32
32
32
32
32
Number of haplotype
18
11
18
19
21
Haplotype diversity
0.952
0.985
0.951
0.962
0.970
π
0.0137
0.0219
0.0080
0.0077
0.0080
Polymorphic site
25
23
38
47
52
PI site
15
9
21
36
33
Singleton site
10
1
17
11
19
Nucleotide diversity and discriminatory power of the Artemisia chloroplast markersTo optimize the accD-1 k + ycf1b marker for the family Asteraceae, 212 accD and 211 ycf1 genes of Asteraceae species retrieved from NCBI were analyzed. We compared the primer binding sites using multiple aligned sequences of each gene under a 95% threshold of consensus. The Asteraceae ycf1 sequences at the 3′-end of the ycf1bF primer binding site [30] had five to six nucleotide mismatches. In contrast, the primer binding sites of ycf1bR as well as of the forward and reverse primers of accD-1 k were mostly conserved. Considering the consensus sequences, we designed and optimized primer pairs of the accD-1 k + ycf1b marker for Asteraceae species (Table 6). In silico estimation of PCR amplification under two stringency criteria predicted a 96–100% PCR success rate for the ycf1b-Asteraceae-F/R primer pair in the Asteraceae family (Additional file 2: Table S8) compared to 0% for the ycf1bF/R primer pair [30]. The accD-Asteraceae-F/R primer pair was predicted to have a 100% PCR success rate under both stringency conditions.
Table 6
Optimized accD and ycf1 barcode primers for the family Asteraceae
Barcode
Primer
Sequence (5′ to 3′)
accD-1 k
Forward
Consensus at 95% thresholda
CGATGTTATTTAAGAMGGAGTTCG
accD-Asteraceae-Fb
CGATGTTATTTAAGAAGGAGTTCG
Reverse
Consensus at 95% thresholda
CAAACGGGTAATTTTCTCCCC
accD-Asteraceae-Rb
CAAACGGGTAATTTTCTCCCC
Expected amplicon size (bp)
928–1079
ycf1b
Forward
Consensus at 95% thresholdd
RMTCGACGAAAATCYGGTTCTTCYAAAT
ycf1b-Asteraceae-Fc
GCTCGACGAAAATCCGGTTCTTCCAAAT
ycf1bFe
TCTCGACGAAAATCAGATTGTTGTGAAT
Reverse
Consensus at 95% thresholdd
WTACATGYSAAAGTGATGGAAAA
ycf1b-Asteraceae-Rc
ATACATGCCAAAGTGATGGAAAA
ycf1bRe
ATACATGTCAAAGTGATGGAAAA
Expected amplicon size (bp)
874
aConsensus at 95% threshold across 212 accD sequences from the family Asteraceae
b, cOptimized primers for the family Asteraceae
dConsensus at 95% threshold across 211 ycf1 sequences from the family Asteraceae
eUniversal barcode primer set designed for angiosperm [30]
Optimized accD and ycf1 barcode primers for the family AsteraceaeaConsensus at 95% threshold across 212 accD sequences from the family Asteraceaeb, cOptimized primers for the family AsteraceaedConsensus at 95% threshold across 211 ycf1 sequences from the family AsteraceaeeUniversal barcode primer set designed for angiosperm [30]
Discussion
The accurate identification of plant species is important not only for taxonomy but also in agriculture and pharmaceuticals. The genus Artemisia includes a number of taxa of medicinal and economic value; however, classification and delimitation of individual species are challenging due to the insufficient morphological characters, frequent natural hybridization, and the presence of diverse intermediates [1, 5, 14–16]. Molecular marker techniques based on robust genomic tools could resolve issues in the species delimitation and phylogenetic relationships of Artemisia. As a universal barcode for plants, ITS1, ITS2, and ETS were developed into a sequence-characterized amplified region [50, 51] or high-resolution melt markers [52] and applied to Artemisia. However, insufficient sequence polymorphism of the markers and the frequent polyploidy of Artemisia hindered their use for species identification. In the previous comparative plastome analysis of the 11 Artemisia species, intergenic spacer regions, including ccsA-ndhD, trnH-psbA, ndhG-ndhI, rps18-rpl20, and rps15-ycf1, were identified as mutational hotspots. However, these loci have not been analyzed in the wide range of taxa of the Asteraceae family [40]. Additionally, known core chloroplast barcodes, such as rbcL, matK, rpoB and rpoC1, had low discriminatory power for classification of Artemisia taxa [21-23]. Therefore, discovery of novel barcodes with high discriminatory power or use of the whole plastome as a super-barcode is important. In this study, we investigated 32 whole plastomes from 21 Artemisia taxa native to East Asia, the largest number of Artemisia plastomes analyzed to date, to establish a basis for phylogenomics and DNA barcode development.The Artemisia plastomes showed structural characteristics and genetic properties typical of the angiosperm plastome. The plastomes of Artemisia taxa are approximately 151 kb in length on average and organized into quadripartite regions with no structural variation among taxa. Each genome contains the same number of genes (87 protein-coding, 37 tRNA, and 8 rRNA genes) with a similar GC content and conserved intron positions. Such highly similar plastomes of Artemisia taxa enable multiple alignment of protein-coding genes and whole plastomes to identify regions with high sequence divergence. Interestingly, singly nucleotide InDel mutations resulting in frame-shift or premature stop codon were identified in rpoA of A. montana and ycf1 of A. selengensis. In several species of Asteraceae, similar single nucleotide InDels were identified at the SSC/IR junction. For example, both Chrysanthemum indicum (GenBank accession NC020320) and C. boreal (GenBank accession MG913594) harbor a single nucleotide InDel in ycf1, which leads to a premature stop codon. A comparative sequence analysis identified eight IGRs with relatively high sequence divergence between taxa, mostly due to insertion of LSRs. In particular, trnH-psbA has been used as a plant DNA barcode [53]. The noncoding trnH-psbA spacer of Artemisia contains LSRs highly variable in size and sequence between and even within species, providing sufficient discriminatory power (π = 0.014) for taxon delimitation. Additionally, we identified highly diverged intergenic regions in the Artemisia plastome, such as rps16-trnQ-UUG, trnE-UUC-rpoB, ndhC-trnV-UAC, and rbcL-accD in LSC and ndhF-rpl32, rpl32-trnL-UAG, and rps15-ycf1 in SSC. These regions have sufficient potential to be used as barcode markers (Additional file 2, Table S5). We anticipate that successful PCR amplification of these intergenic spacers and other polymorphic LSR loci will enable development of a single DNA marker for genotype identification below the species level. Meanwhile, consistent with a report of selected chloroplast genes in a limited number of Artemisia species in China [21], most protein-coding genes had low sequence divergence, with the exception of accD, ycf1, and rps16. These genes contained nucleotide diversity hotspots in exon (accD and ycf1) or intron (rps16) regions that were under weak positive selection or relaxed selective constraints. accD was reported to be under positive selection (ω > 1) in A. selengensis [38] whereas the 5′-region of the ycf1-coding sequence was suggested to be a plastid barcode for land plants [30]. These two genes play important roles in flowering plants. Plastid accD and ycf1 are essential for plant fitness and leaf development [54] or viability [55]. Interestingly, accD genes in several angiosperm lineages, such as Campanulaceae and Poaceae, were lost or relocated to the nuclear genome, presumably due to endosymbiotic evolution [56]. Because the highly variable nucleotide sequences of accD and ycf1 in a range of land plants are likely to be the result of environmental adaptation during evolution [57-59], they may be useful markers for plastid evolution. In this study, the conserved coding sequences flanking variable regions of accD and ycf1 in Artemisia enabled the design of PCR primers for cross-species amplification with clear sequence polymorphisms, yielding novel Artemisia barcode markers with sufficient resolution to distinguish 18 (ycf1b), 19 (accD-1 k), and 21 (accD-1 k + ycf1b) plastome haplotypes from 21 Artemisia taxa (Table 5). This is the highest discriminatory power of chloroplast markers to identify chloroplast haplotype reported from Artemisia to date. Moreover, we described the utilization of accD and ycf1 as molecular markers for phylogenetic analysis of the Asteraceae family. As shown in the ML tree based on 211 Asteraceae ycf1 sequences, ycf1 enabled tribe level resolution of the family Asteraceae (Additional file 1: Fig. S4). Phylogenetic analysis based on accD resulted in an ML tree showing similar topology, which enabled separation of all tribes in the family Asteraceae (Additional file 1: Fig. S5). Indeed, nucleotide sequence divergence in accD was concentrated in a small hotspot (Additional file 1: Fig. S2); therefore, this hotspot could serve as a universal marker for the family Asteraceae. The ycf1b marker, which was designed based on the consensus sequence of 144 species of 16 families [30], had a number of nucleotide mismatches in the primer binding sites for diverse Asteraceae ycf1 genes. We designed and optimized novel primer sets for the ycf1 and accD markers to ensure amplification of all Asteraceae species. Importantly, the combination of accD and ycf1 has potential as a core molecular marker for Asteraceae based on its increased resolution for taxon delimitation of Artemisia.Phylogenetic inference based on molecular markers that have evolved under strong pressures of natural selection would be untrustworthy [60]. According to the Ka/Ks ratio, accD (ω = 1.06) and ycf1 (ω = 0.67) are assumed to have evolved under relaxation of selective constraints. Additionally, their reconstructed topologies were congruent with those inferred from different types of markers. These findings suggest that the use of accD and ycf1 markers on phylogeny estimation can be potentially effective. Another strength of this study is the use of whole plastome sequences as well as 80 protein-coding genes as super-barcodes for phylogenomic inference of Artemisia based on maternal haplotypes. Recent progress in whole genome sequencing of A. annua [41] and analyses of conserved orthologs in the Asteraceae [61, 62] expanded our understanding of taxonomic relationships among Artemisia species based on the nuclear genome. Meanwhile, the chloroplast DNA markers developed in this study provide straightforward tools to infer evolutionary changes in the maternal lineages. The comparative analysis of complete plastome sequences and 80 protein-coding genes as super-barcodes in Artemisia discriminated the plastomes of most taxa and strongly supported the subgenus level classification, enabling higher-resolution analysis of relationship among taxa than prior phylogenetic studies using nuclear ITS/ETS or selected chloroplast DNA data [4, 8]. There was no difference in the tree topology between the ML and BI analyses and there was robust support for most clades, suggesting the validity of the relationships among clades and taxa (Fig. 5 and Additional file 1: Fig. S3). Interestingly, both phylogenetic trees strongly supported (100%) the monophyletic group of the subgenus Dracunculus consisting of A. capillaris, A. dracunculus, and A. hallaisanensis, whereas the subgenus Artemisia was paraphyletic with two divided clades. This finding was consistent with the previous molecular phylogenetic studies reporting that the subgenus Dracunculus was a monophyletic group and the subgnus Artemisia was a paraphyletic group [8, 16, 19]. In contrast, the traditional section level classification of Artemisia taxa [5, 6, 11, 17] had no support from clades based on the whole plastomes. A new finding is putative introgressive hybridizations between members of A. argyi/A. argyrophylla/A. princeps and A. fukudo/A. nakaii. The almost identical whole plastome sequences and sympatric distribution of these taxa suggest on-going hybridization among members of these taxa. Introgressive hybridization, combined with rapid radiation, may have caused the transfer of chloroplast haplotypes between species which might account for the inconsistency between traditional section level classification and plastome phylogeny. Molecular markers developed from nuclear genome should provide additional information to distinguish those taxa harboring the same plastome and to create reliable phylogenies of the genus Artemisia.
Conclusions
The whole plastome including 80 protein-coding genes of Artemisia is sufficiently polymorphic to be used as super-barcodes for this genus, although they did not show 100% discriminatory power. In addition, accD and ycf1 are highly polymorphic loci not only in Artemisia but also in the family Asteraceae; therefore, these genes have potential as universal markers for the family Asteraceae. The complete plastome investigated in this study will facilitate further research on Artemisia and will enhance our understanding of Asteraceae plastome evolution.
Methods
Plant materials and DNA extraction
A total of 19 individual samples representing 18 taxa of the genus Artemisia (A. annua, A. apiacea, A. argyi, A. capillaris, A. feddei, A. freyniana f. discolor, A. fukudo, A. gmelinii, A. hallaisanensis, A. japonica, A. keiskeana, A. montana, A. nakaii, A. princeps, A. rubripes, A. selengensis, A. sieversiana, and A. stolonifera) were collected in Korea. We achieved all required permits for the protected areas from the National Park Services and local governments. For A. selengensis, two independent samples were included. After species identification based on morphological characters, the voucher specimens were preserved in the herbarium (KB) of the National Institute of Biological Resources (Incheon, Korea). Details of the plant samples are presented in Table 1. Genomic DNAs were extracted from the dried leaves using a cetyl trimethylammonium bromide method [63] with modifications of polysaccharide precipitation by 2-propanol in the presence of 2.5 M NaCl and RNase treatment.
Sequencing, assembly, and annotation
Illumina sequencing libraries with 500 bp inserts for 19 samples were constructed using the TruSeq DNA PCR-Free kit (Illumina, San Diego, CA, USA) and paired-end (PE) sequences (2 × 300 bp) were generated using the MiSeq platform (Illumina). The sequence data generated in this study are summarized in Additional file 2: Table S1. Additionally, Illumina reads of A. frigida (NCBI SRR8208356) and A. dracunculus (NCBI SRR8208350) were downloaded from the NCBI SRA database and were subjected to the downstream analysis. To assemble the sequence reads from each library into a circular plastome, NOVOPlasty software v2.6.6 [64] was used with rbcL and rpoC2 chosen from the published plastome of A. argyi (GenBank accession NC030785) as seed sequences. With the draft assemblies, orientation of the SSC was determined according to its structural order in the plastome of A. argyi and the completeness of each assembly was verified by read mapping using Geneious Prime v2019 (Biomatters, Auckland, New Zealand) [65]. Any ambiguous regions in the draft assembles were subjected to Sanger sequencing of PCR amplicons. Genes in the plastomes were identified using Geneious Prime with a 90% similarity criterion compared to the published Artemisia plastomes with subsequent manual curation. tRNA genes were identified with tRNAscan-SE software [66]. All identified genes were validated by comparison with the homologs in the Arabidopsis thaliana plastome (GenBank accession AP000423). Circular gene maps of the Artemisia plastomes were generated using OGDRAW v.1.2 [67]. The plastome sequences of 11 Artemisia species deposited in GenBank were downloaded and re-annotated as described above. The plastomes assembled in this study have been deposited in NCBI under the accession numbers MG951482 − MG951500.
Sequence comparison and divergence analysis
Whole plastomes of 32 Artemisia samples were aligned using MAFFT v7.450 [68]. Additionally, the nucleotide sequences of 80 non-redundant protein-coding genes were extracted from each plastome, concatenated into a single sequence, and aligned using the Translation Alignment tool with MAFFT in Geneious Prime. After removing gaps and poorly aligned regions using the Mask Alignment tool of Geneious Prime, the pairwise distance of 80 protein-coding genes between taxa was calculated with Geneious Prime. For each gene, multiple sequence alignment was obtained using the Translation Alignment tool with MUSCLE [69] in Geneious Prime with default options. Individual alignments were manually curated. Nucleotide diversity (average number of nucleotide differences per site between two sequences, π), number of variable sites, and PI sites were obtained using DnaSP v6 [70]. Chloroplast DNA inversions in the Artemisia plastomes were identified using the Mauve tool of Geneious Prime and the plastome sequence of Nicotiana tabacum (GenBank accession NC001879) as a reference. Ka and Ks values of the coding sequences were determined using the yn00 program in the PAML v4.9i package [71]. To identify positively selected sites in multiple sequence alignments, site models (seqtype = 1, model = 0, NSsites = 0, 1, 2, 3, 7, 8) in CodeML from PAML v4.9i or EasyCodeML v1.21 [72] were used. The unrooted ML tree of 32 Artemisia taxa, constructed using the MAFFT alignments of 80 protein-coding genes and RAxML v8.2.9 [73], was used as an input tree. The amino acid sites under positive selection were detected based on the results of a posterior BEB analysis with a probability threshold of 0.95. SSRs with a unit length of 2–6 bp repeated at least three times were surveyed across the 32 Artemisia whole plastomes using Phobos v3.3.12 in Geneious Prime. LSRs were identified using Repeat Finder v1.0.1 in Geneious Prime and their structures and inter-taxon polymorphisms were manually curated. LSR was defined as 11–100 bp with spacers no longer than 50 bp and 100% identity between sequences. Both direct tandem and hairpin repeats were considered, and palindromic structures were analyzed. LSRs located in SSR regions were excluded to reduce redundancy.
Phylogenetic analysis
Phylogenetic trees based on 80 protein-coding genes of 32 Artemisia plastomes were generated by the ML and BI methods using RAxML v8.2.9 [73] and MrBayes v3.2.7 [74], respectively, with Aster spathulifolius (GenBank accession NC027434) as an outgroup. For ML analysis, partitioning of protein-coding genes was carried out using PartitionFinder2 with a greedy algorithm [75] and unlinked branchlengths parameter. The GTR + G model for protein-coding genes and the GRT + G + I model for whole plastomes was chosen as the best-fit DNA substitution model according to the Akaike Information Criterion correction in ModelTest-NG v0.1.6 [76]. ML trees were constructed using rapid bootstrapping and search for the best-scoring ML tree option of RAxML v8.2.9 [73] with 1000 bootstrap replicates. To choose appropriate outgroup taxa, the species from several tribes of the Asteraceae, including Cynara humilis in Cardueae, Helianthus annuus in Helentheae, Aster spathulifolius in Astereae, and Chrysanthemun boreale and C. indicum in Anthemideae, were analyzed together with Artemisia taxa. Among them, A. spathulifolius (GenBank accession NC027434) was chosen as an outgroup species due to its distinct separation from the ingroup taxa. For Bayesian analysis, the Markov chain Monte Carlo (MCMC) algorithm was applied for 11 million generations with four heated chains and sampling of trees every 1000 generations. The first 25% of trees were discarded as burn-in. The average standard deviation of split frequencies was below 0.01 after 800,000 generations and 0.0028 at the final generation. The Potential Scale Reduction Factor, a convergence diagnostic, was 1.001 on average. The posterior distribution was evaluated using Tracer v1.7 [77]. On the trace plot of log-likelihood, a good sign of MCMC convergence was shown before 10% proportion of burn-in. The consensus trees were finally edited using the MEGA7 software [78].
Development of Asteraceae markers
Complete plastomes of Asteraceae species were downloaded from NCBI non-redundant DNA database. In the case of redundant sequences available for the same accession, further analysis collapsed them into one representative plastome. The coding sequences of accD and ycf1 from 219 plastomes, identified using BLASTN (BLAST+ v2.10.0) search, were extracted and aligned using MUSCLE [69]. Sequences shorter than 1 kb for accD and 1.5 kb for ycf1 were excluded. The sequence alignments of 212 accD and 211 ycf1 genes were further refined by translation align in Geneious Prime. For the combinations of these two genes, aligned sequences of accD and ycf1 were concatenated. A phylogenetic tree of Asteraceae accD and ycf1 was constructed by the ML method using RAxML software with the GTRGAMMA model and 1000 bootstrap replications. The barcode PCR primers were manually designed based on the consensus sequences generated from the multiple sequence alignments at a threshold level of 95%. In silico PCR analysis was conducted using FastPCR software v6.0 [79].Additional file 1 : Figure S1 to S7. Fig. S1. Comparison of the IR border regions of the Asteraceae plastomes. Fig. S2. Multiple alignments of accD coding sequences in the 32 Artemisia plastomes showing hotspots of nucleotide sequence diversity. Eight positively selected amino acid substitutions are indicated by red triangles. The core hotspot of 276 bp in length (616–963 bp over the gapped alignment) is indicated by arrows. Fig. S3. A ML tree based on the whole plastomes of 32 Artemisia taxa. Bootstrap values are indicated on the nodes. Colored lines and braces at the right of the tree indicate section and subgenus names of Artemisia, respectively, that include taxa. Fig. S4. A ML tree of ycf1 in the Asteraceae family. Taxa belonging to the same supertribe or subfamily are grouped. Fig. S5. A ML tree of accD in the Asteraceae family. Taxa belonging to the same supertribe or subfamily are grouped. Fig. S6. Performances of accD and ycf1 in identifying the Asteraceae taxa using BLAST search. Hits with 100% identity were counted into two categories, unique hit and cross-hit to other species or tribe(s). Fig. S7. A ML tree based on the accD-1 k + ycf1b marker sequences of 32 Artemisia taxa. Bootstrap values are indicated on the nodes.Additional file 2 : Tables S1 to S8. Table S1. Sample information and statistics of the Illumina PE sequence data of Artemisia taxa. Table S2. Gene contents of the Artemisia plastomes. Table S3. Pairwise nucleotide similarity matrix of the 32 Artemisia plastomes. Table S4. Highly variable regions among the 32 Artemisia plastomes. Table S5. Nucleotide diversity and polymorphism of 11 highly diverged regions in the Artemisia plastome. Table S6. Likelihood ratio tests to identify positively selected sites within the accD and ycf1 coding sequences across the 32 Artemisia plastomes. Table S7. Polymorphic LSRs identified in the 32 Artemisia plastomes. Table S8. In silico PCR analysis of the accD-Asteraceae and ycf1b-Asteraceae markers.
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