4.7 Article

Lineage-Specific Variation in IR Boundary Shift Events, Inversions, and Substitution Rates among Caprifoliaceae s.l. (Dipsacales) Plastomes

Journal

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/ijms221910485

Keywords

accD; amino acid repeat motifs; clpP; intron loss; positive selection; intracellular gene transfer

Funding

  1. Yeungnam University [221A061009]

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Plastid genomes within the Caprifoliaceae s.l. family underwent one inversion and two inverted repeat boundary shifts in the common ancestor, followed by overall conservation; new plastome sequences provide insights into structural evolution within the family, with accelerated nucleotide substitution rates observed in the Valerianoideae subfamily.
Caprifoliaceae s.l. plastid genomes (plastomes) show that one inversion and two inverted repeat boundary shifts occurred in the common ancestor of this family, after which the plastomes are generally conserved. This study reports plastome sequences of five additional species, Fedia cornucopiae, Valeriana fauriei, and Valerianella locusta from the subfamily Valerianoideae, as well as Dipsacus japonicus and Scabiosa comosa from the subfamily Dipsacoideae. Combined with the published plastomes, these plastomes provide new insights into the structural evolution of plastomes within the family. Moreover, the three plastomes from the subfamily Valerianoideae exhibited accelerated nucleotide substitution rates, particularly at synonymous sites, across the family. The patterns of accD sequence divergence in the family are dynamic with structural changes, including interruption of the conserved domain and increases in nonsynonymous substitution rates. In particular, the Valeriana accD gene harbors a large insertion of amino acid repeat (AAR) motifs, and intraspecific polymorphism with a variable number of AARs in the Valeriana accD gene was detected. We found a correlation between intron losses and increased ratios of nonsynonymous to synonymous substitution rates in the clpP gene with intensified positive selection. In addition, two Dipsacoideae plastomes revealed the loss of the plastid-encoded rps15, and a potential functional gene transfer to the nucleus was confirmed.

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