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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Mechanisms of Functional and Physical Genome Reduction in Photosynthetic and Nonphotosynthetic Parasitic Plants of the Broomrape Family

TLDR
The authors report the complete plastomes of 10 photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic parasites plus their nonparasitic sister from the broomrape family (Orobanchaceae), finding that the establishment of obligate parasitism triggers the relaxation of selective constraints.
Abstract
Nonphotosynthetic plants possess strongly reconfigured plastomes attributable to convergent losses of photosynthesis and housekeeping genes, making them excellent systems for studying genome evolution under relaxed selective pressures. We report the complete plastomes of 10 photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic parasites plus their nonparasitic sister from the broomrape family (Orobanchaceae). By reconstructing the history of gene losses and genome reconfigurations, we find that the establishment of obligate parasitism triggers the relaxation of selective constraints. Partly because of independent losses of one inverted repeat region, Orobanchaceae plastomes vary 3.5-fold in size, with 45 kb in American squawroot (Conopholis americana) representing the smallest plastome reported from land plants. Of the 42 to 74 retained unique genes, only 16 protein genes, 15 tRNAs, and four rRNAs are commonly found. Several holoparasites retain ATP synthase genes with intact open reading frames, suggesting a prolonged function in these plants. The loss of photosynthesis alters the chromosomal architecture in that recombinogenic factors accumulate, fostering large-scale chromosomal rearrangements as functional reduction proceeds. The retention of DNA fragments is strongly influenced by both their proximity to genes under selection and the co-occurrence with those in operons, indicating complex constraints beyond gene function that determine the evolutionary survival time of plastid regions in nonphotosynthetic plants.

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Unprecedented organelle genomic variations in morning glories reveal independent evolutionary scenarios of parasitic plants and the diversification of plant mitochondrial complexes

TL;DR: In this article , the authors sequenced 22 new mitogenomes and 12 new plastomes in Convolvulaceae along with previously known ones, and totally analyzed organelle genomes of 23 species in the family.
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Complete Plastome Sequencing Reveals an Extremely Diminished SSC Region in Hemiparasitic Pedicularis ishidoyana (Orobanchaceae)

TL;DR: The results suggest that these hemiparasitic Pedicularis plants might represent an early stage of parasitism that has developed stepwise in this family from non-parasites to holoparasites.
Journal ArticleDOI

The Cryptic Plastid of Euglena longa Defines a New Type of Nonphotosynthetic Plastid Organelle

TL;DR: The E. longa plastid defines a new class of relic plastids that is drastically different from the best-studied organelle of this category, the apicoplast, and describes the most striking attribute of the organelle could be the presence of a linearized Calvin-Benson pathway, including RuBisCO yet lacking the gluconeogenetic part of the standard cycle.
Journal ArticleDOI

Two Korean Endemic Clematis Chloroplast Genomes: Inversion, Reposition, Expansion of the Inverted Repeat Region, Phylogenetic Analysis, and Nucleotide Substitution Rates

TL;DR: In this article, the chloroplast genomes of Clematis were sequenced to provide information for studies on phylogeny and evolution of the Ranunculaceae plastid genome.
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Plastid Genomes of the Early Vascular Plant Genus Selaginella Have Unusual Direct Repeat Structures and Drastically Reduced Gene Numbers.

TL;DR: The early vascular plants in the genus Selaginella, which is the sole genus of the Selaginellaceae family, have an important place in evolutionary history, along with ferns, as such plants are valuable resources for deciphering plant evolution as discussed by the authors.
References
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Journal ArticleDOI

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TL;DR: The program MODELTEST uses log likelihood scores to establish the model of DNA evolution that best fits the data.
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progressiveMauve: Multiple Genome Alignment with Gene Gain, Loss and Rearrangement

TL;DR: A new method to align two or more genomes that have undergone rearrangements due to recombination and substantial amounts of segmental gain and loss is described, demonstrating high accuracy in situations where genomes have undergone biologically feasible amounts of genome rearrangement, segmental loss and loss.
Journal ArticleDOI

Automatic annotation of organellar genomes with DOGMA

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The complete nucleotide sequence of the tobacco chloroplast genome: its gene organization and expression.

TL;DR: Five sequences coding for proteins homologous to components of the respiratory‐chain NADH dehydrogenase from human mitochondria have been found and sequence and expression analyses indicate both prokaryotic and eukaryotic features of the chloroplast genes.
Journal ArticleDOI

Detecting Correlated Evolution on Phylogenies: A General Method for the Comparative Analysis of Discrete Characters

TL;DR: A new statistical method is presented for analysing the relationship between two discrete characters that are measured across a group of hierarchically evolved species or populations and assessing whether a pattern of association across the group is evidence for correlated evolutionary change in the two characters.
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