4.7 Article

Comparison and Phylogenetic Analyses of Nine Complete Chloroplast Genomes of Zingibereae

Journal

FORESTS
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/f12060710

Keywords

Curcuma; Pyrgophyllum; chloroplast genome; phylogenetic analysis

Categories

Funding

  1. Biological Resources Programme, Chinese Academy of Sciences [KFJ-BRP-017-19]
  2. Natural Science Foundation of Guangdong Province [2018A0303130237]
  3. National Natural Science Foundation of China [32070223, 31200161]

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The study investigated the plastome variation in nine species representing five genera of Zingibereae, confirming the relationship between Stahlianthus and Curcuma, and grouping Kaempferia, Boesenbergia, and Zingiber together as the Kaempferia group. Pyrgophyllum was found to be embedded within the Hedychium clade, not allied with the Curcuma clade. The findings demonstrate the power of plastid phylogenomics in improving phylogenetic relationships within Zingibereae.
Zingibereae is a large tribe in the family Zingiberaceae, which contains plants with important medicinal, edible, and ornamental values. Although tribes of Zingiberaceae are well circumscribed, the circumscription of many genera within Zingibereae and the relationships among them remain elusive, especially for the genera of Boesenbergia, Curcuma, Kaempferia and Pyrgophyllum. In this study, we investigated the plastome variation in nine species representing five genera of Zingibereae. All plastomes showed a typical quadripartite structure with lengths ranging from 162,042 bp to 163,539 bp and contained 132-134 genes, consisting of 86-88 coding genes, 38 transfer RNA genes and eight ribosomal RNA genes. Moreover, the characteristics of the long repeats sequences and simple sequence repeats (SSRs) were detected. In addition, we conducted phylogenomic analyses of the Zingibereae and related taxa with plastomes data from additional 32 species from Genbank. Our results confirmed that Stahlianthus is closely related to Curcuma, supporting the idea of merging it into Curcuma. Kaempferia, Boesenbergia and Zingiber were confirmed as close relatives and grouped together as the Kaempferia group. Pyrgophyllum is not allied with the Curcuma clade but instead is embedded within the Hedychium clade. Our results demonstrate the power of plastid phylogenomics in improving the phylogenetic relationships within Zingibereae and provide a new insight into plastome evolution in Zingibereceae.

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