4.7 Article

Dynamic Chloroplast Genome Rearrangement and DNA Barcoding for Three Apiaceae Species Known as the Medicinal Herb Bang-Poong

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms20092196

Keywords

Ledebouriella seseloides; Peucedanum japonicum; Glehnia littoralis; chloroplast genome; inverted repeat (IR) expansion; phylogenetic analysis; divergence time estimation

Funding

  1. The Genetic and Genomic Evaluation of Indigenous Biological Resources 2012 from the National Institute of Biological Resources under the Ministry of Environment
  2. Cooperative Research Program for Agriculture Science & Technology Development, Rural Development Administration, Republic of Korea [PJ13238]

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Three Apiaceae species Ledebouriella seseloides, Peucedanum japonicum, and Glehnia littoralis are used as Asian herbal medicines, with the confusingly similar common name Bang-poong. We characterized the complete chloroplast (cp) genomes and 45S nuclear ribosomal DNA (45S nrDNA) sequences of two accessions for each species. The complete cp genomes of G. littoralis, L. seseloides, and P. japonicum were 147,467, 147,830, and 164,633 bp, respectively. Compared to the other species, the P. japonicum cp genome had a huge inverted repeat expansion and a segmental inversion. The 45S nrDNA cistron sequences of the three species were almost identical in size and structure. Despite the structural variation in the P. japonicum cp genome, phylogenetic analysis revealed that G. littoralis diverged 5-6 million years ago (Mya), while P. japonicum diverged from L. seseloides only 2-3 Mya. Abundant copy number variations including tandem repeats, insertion/deletions, and single nucleotide polymorphisms, were found at the interspecies level. Intraspecies-level polymorphism was also found for L. seseloides and G. littoralis. We developed nine PCR barcode markers to authenticate all three species. This study characterizes the genomic differences between L. seseloides, P. japonicum, and G. littoralis; provides a method of species identification; and sheds light on the evolutionary history of these three species.

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