4.6 Article

Shifts from cis-to trans-splicing of five mitochondrial introns in Tolypanthus maclurei

Journal

PEERJ
Volume 9, Issue -, Pages -

Publisher

PEERJ INC
DOI: 10.7717/peerj.12260

Keywords

Intron evolution; Mitogenome; Trans-splicing; Horizontal gene transfer; Angiosperms

Funding

  1. National Natural Science Foundation of China [31811530297]

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Shifts from cis-to trans-splicing of mitochondrial introns may not be uncommon among angiosperms, as evidenced by the study on Tolypanthus maclurei, a hemiparasitic plant from the family Loranthaceae (Santalales). In addition to five shared trans-spliced introns in seed plants, this species exhibited shifts in splicing patterns for additional introns, including two specific to T. maclurei. Furthermore, a chimeric gene atp1 in its mitogenome suggested horizontal gene transfer from Lamiales.
Shifts from cis-to trans-splicing of mitochondrial introns tend to correlate with relative genome rearrangement rates during vascular plant evolution, as is particularly apparent in some lineages of gymnosperms. However, although many angiosperms have also relatively high mitogenomic rearrangement rates, very few cisto trans-splicing shifts except for five trans-spliced introns shared in seed plants have been reported. In this study, we sequenced and characterized the mitogenome of Tolypanthus maclurei, a hemiparasitic plant from the family Loranthaceae (Santalales). The mitogenome was assembled into a circular chromosome of 256,961 bp long, relatively small compared with its relatives from Santalales. It possessed a gene content of typical angiosperm mitogenomes, including 33 protein-coding genes, three rRNA genes and ten tRNA genes. Plastid-derived DNA fragments took up 9.1% of the mitogenome. The mitogenome contained one group I intron (cox1i729) and 23 group II introns. We found shifts from cis-to trans-splicing of five additional introns in its mitogenome, of which two are specific in T. maclurei. Moreover, atp1 is a chimeric gene and phylogenetic analysis indicated that a 356 bp region near the 3 ' end of atp1 of T. maclurei was acquired from Lamiales via horizontal gene transfer. Our results suggest that shifts to trans-splicing of mitochondrial introns may not be uncommon among angiosperms.

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