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Extensive variation in synonymous substitution rates in mitochondrial genes of seed plants

TLDR
The extremes of synonymous substitution rates measured here constitute by far the largest known range of rate variation for any group of organisms and highlight the utility of examining absolute substitution rates in a phylogenetic context rather than by traditional pairwise methods.
Abstract
It has long been known that rates of synonymous substitutions are unusually low in mitochondrial genes of flowering and other land plants. Although two dramatic exceptions to this pattern have recently been reported, it is unclear how often major increases in substitution rates occur during plant mitochondrial evolution and what the overall magnitude of substitution rate variation is across plants. A broad survey was undertaken to evaluate synonymous substitution rates in mitochondrial genes of angiosperms and gymnosperms. Although most taxa conform to the generality that plant mitochondrial sequences evolve slowly, additional cases of highly accelerated rates were found. We explore in detail one of these new cases, within the genus Silene. A roughly 100-fold increase in synonymous substitution rate is estimated to have taken place within the last 5 million years and involves only one of ten species of Silene sampled in this study. Examples of unusually slow sequence evolution were also identified. Comparison of the fastest and slowest lineages shows that synonymous substitution rates vary by four orders of magnitude across seed plants. In other words, some plant mitochondrial lineages accumulate more synonymous change in 10,000 years than do others in 100 million years. Several perplexing cases of gene-to-gene variation in sequence divergence within a plant were uncovered. Some of these probably reflect interesting biological phenomena, such as horizontal gene transfer, mitochondrial-to-nucleus transfer, and intragenomic variation in mitochondrial substitution rates, whereas others are likely the result of various kinds of errors. The extremes of synonymous substitution rates measured here constitute by far the largest known range of rate variation for any group of organisms. These results highlight the utility of examining absolute substitution rates in a phylogenetic context rather than by traditional pairwise methods. Why substitution rates are generally so low in plant mitochondrial genomes yet occasionally increase dramatically remains mysterious.

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Journal ArticleDOI

Mitochondrial DNA as a marker of molecular diversity: a reappraisal

TL;DR: It is argued that mitochondrial DNA is not always clonal, far from neutrally evolving and certainly not clock‐like, questioning its relevance as a witness of recent species and population history and the great potential of accumulating mtDNA data for evolutionary and functional analysis of the mitochondrial genome.
Journal ArticleDOI

Synteny and collinearity in plant genomes.

TL;DR: New genome sequences and improved analytical approaches are clarifying angiosperm evolution and revealing patterns of differential gene loss after genome duplication and differential gene retention associated with evolution of some morphological complexity.
Journal ArticleDOI

Multiple Multilocus DNA Barcodes from the Plastid Genome Discriminate Plant Species Equally Well

TL;DR: Resolution to the contentious debate on plant barcoding should involve increased attention to practical issues related to the ease of sequence recovery, global alignability, and marker redundancy in multilocus plant DNA barc coding systems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rapid evolution of enormous, multichromosomal genomes in flowering plant mitochondria with exceptionally high mutation rates.

TL;DR: A pair of species within the genus Silene have evolved the largest known mitochondrial genomes, coinciding with extreme changes in mutation rate, recombination activity, and genome structure.
Journal ArticleDOI

Selecting barcoding loci for plants: evaluation of seven candidate loci with species-level sampling in three divergent groups of land plants.

TL;DR: Evaluated the seven main candidate plastid regions in three divergent groups of land plants, no single locus showed high levels of universality and resolvability and when multiple loci were combined, fewer barcodes were shared among species.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

RAxML-VI-HPC: maximum likelihood-based phylogenetic analyses with thousands of taxa and mixed models

TL;DR: UNLABELLED RAxML-VI-HPC (randomized axelerated maximum likelihood for high performance computing) is a sequential and parallel program for inference of large phylogenies with maximum likelihood (ML) that has been used to compute ML trees on two of the largest alignments to date.
Journal ArticleDOI

A rapid DNA isolation procedure for small quantities of fresh leaf tissue

TL;DR: From the kinetic data, it becomes evident that the reductive amination reaction is highly adaptive to the ammonium environment.
Journal ArticleDOI

HyPhy: hypothesis testing using phylogenies

TL;DR: The HyPhypackage is designed to provide a flexible and unified platform for carrying out likelihood-based analyses on multiple alignments of molecular sequence data, with the emphasis on studies of rates and patterns of sequence evolution.
Journal ArticleDOI

Rates of nucleotide substitution vary greatly among plant mitochondrial, chloroplast, and nuclear DNAs.

TL;DR: The rate of cpDNA evolution appears to have slowed in some dicot lineages following the monocot/dicot split, and the slowdown is more conspicuous at nonsynonymous sites than at synonymous sites.
Journal ArticleDOI

r8s: inferring absolute rates of molecular evolution and divergence times in the absence of a molecular clock

TL;DR: R8s version 1.5 is a program which uses parametric, nonparametric and semiparametric methods to relax the assumption of constant rates of evolution to obtain better estimates of rates and times.
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