Variations and reduction of plastome are associated with the evolution of parasitism in Convolvulaceae
- PMID: 38622367
- DOI: 10.1007/s11103-024-01440-1
Variations and reduction of plastome are associated with the evolution of parasitism in Convolvulaceae
Erratum in
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Correction: variations and reduction of plastome are associated with the evolution of parasitism in Convolvulaceae.Plant Mol Biol. 2024 May 14;114(3):58. doi: 10.1007/s11103-024-01464-7. Plant Mol Biol. 2024. PMID: 38743148 No abstract available.
Abstract
Parasitic lifestyle can often relax the constraint on the plastome, leading to gene pseudogenization and loss, and resulting in diverse genomic structures and rampant genome degradation. Although several plastomes of parasitic Cuscuta have been reported, the evolution of parasitism in the family Convolvulaceae which is linked to structural variations and reduction of plastome has not been well investigated. In this study, we assembled and collected 40 plastid genomes belonging to 23 species representing four subgenera of Cuscuta and ten species of autotrophic Convolvulaceae. Our findings revealed nine types of structural variations and six types of inverted repeat (IR) boundary variations in the plastome of Convolvulaceae spp. These structural variations were associated with the shift of parasitic lifestyle, and IR boundary shift, as well as the abundance of long repeats. Overall, the degradation of Cuscuta plastome proceeded gradually, with one clade exhibiting an accelerated degradation rate. We observed five stages of gene loss in Cuscuta, including NAD(P)H complex → PEP complex → Photosynthesis-related → Ribosomal protein subunits → ATP synthase complex. Based on our results, we speculated that the shift of parasitic lifestyle in early divergent time promoted relaxed selection on plastomes, leading to the accumulation of microvariations, which ultimately resulted in the plastome reduction. This study provides new evidence towards a better understanding of plastomic evolution, variation, and reduction in the genus Cuscuta.
Keywords: Cuscuta; Parasitism; Phylogenomics; Plastome degradation; Structural variation.
© 2024. The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature B.V.
References
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Grants and funding
- 202101BC070003/Key Basic Research Program of Yunnan Province, China
- 31870196/National Natural Science Foundation of China
- XDB31000000/Strategic Priority Research Program of the Chinese Academy of SciencesChinese Academy of Sciences
- 2021FY100200/Science and Technology Basic Resources Investigation Program of China
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