4.6 Article

Mutational Dynamics of Aroid Chloroplast Genomes II

Journal

FRONTIERS IN GENETICS
Volume 11, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

FRONTIERS MEDIA SA
DOI: 10.3389/fgene.2020.610838

Keywords

Araceae (aroid); chloroplast genome; correlations; repeats; InDels (insertions; deletions)

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The study investigated correlations among mutational events at different classification levels within the Araceae family, revealing strong relationships between SNPs, InDels, and repeats, which support the hypothesis of oligonucleotide repeats distribution as mutational hotspots.
The co-occurrence among single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs), insertions-deletions (InDels), and oligonucleotide repeats has been reported in prokaryote, eukaryote, and chloroplast genomes. Correlations among SNPs, InDels, and repeats have been investigated in the plant family Araceae previously using pair-wise sequence alignments of the chloroplast genomes of two morphotypes of one species, Colocasia esculenta belonging to subfamily Aroideae (crown group), and four species from the subfamily Lemnoideae, a basal group. The family Araceae is a large family comprising 3,645 species in 144 genera, grouped into eight subfamilies. In the current study, we performed 34 comparisons using 27 species from 7 subfamilies of Araceae to determine correlation coefficients among the mutational events at the family, subfamily, and genus levels. We express strength of the correlations as: negligible or very weak (0.10-0.19), weak (0.20-0.29), moderate (0.30-0.39), strong (0.40-0.69), very strong (0.70-0.99), and perfect (1.00). We observed strong/very strong correlations in most comparisons, whereas a few comparisons showed moderate correlations. The average correlation coefficient was recorded as 0.66 between SNPs and InDels, 0.50 between InDels and repeats, and 0.42 between SNPs and repeats. In qualitative analyses, 95-100% of the repeats at family and sub-family level, while 36-86% of the repeats at genus level comparisons co-occurred with SNPs in the same bins. Our findings show that such correlations among mutational events exist throughout Araceae and support the hypothesis of distribution of oligonucleotide repeats as a proxy for mutational hotspots.

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