Author:
Mkala Elijah Mbandi,Jost Matthias,Dong Xiang,Mwachala Geoffrey,Musili Paul Mutuku,Wanke Stefan,Hu Guang-Wan,Wang Qing-Feng
Abstract
Abstract
Background
To date, plastid genomes have been published for all but two holoparasitic angiosperm families. However, only a single or a few plastomes represent most of these families. Of the approximately 40 genera of holoparasitic angiosperms, a complete plastid genome sequence is available for only about half. In addition, less than 15 species are currently represented with more than one published plastid genome, most of which belong to the Orobanchaceae. Therefore, a significant portion of the holoparasitic plant plastome diversity remains unexplored. This limited information could hinder potential evolutionary pattern recognition as well as the exploration of inter- and intra-species plastid genome diversity in the most extreme holoparasitic angiosperms.
Results
Here, we report the first plastomes of Kenyan Hydnora abyssinica accessions. The plastomes have a typical quadripartite structure and encode 24 unique genes. Phylogenetic tree reconstruction recovers the Kenyan accessions as monophyletic and together in a clade with the Namibian H. abyssinica accession and the recently published H. arabica from Oman. Hydnora abyssinica as a whole however is recovered as non-monophyletic, with H. arabica nested within. This result is supported by distinct structural plastome synapomorphies as well as pairwise distance estimates that reveal hidden diversity within the Hydnora species in Africa.
Conclusion
We propose to increase efforts to sample widespread holoparasitic species for their plastid genomes, as is the case with H. abyssinica, which is widely distributed in Africa. Morphological reinvestigation and further molecular data are needed to fully investigate the diversity of H. abyssinica along the entire range of distribution, as well as the diversity of currently synonymized taxa.
Funder
National Natural Science Foundation of China
International Partnership Program of Chinese Academy of Sciences
Sino-Africa Joint Research Center, Chinese Academy of Sciences
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Reference59 articles.
1. Nickrent DL. Parasitic angiosperms: how often and how many. Taxon. 2020;69(1):5–27.
2. Wicke S, Naumann J. Molecular evolution of plastid genomes in parasitic flowering plants. In: advances in botanical research. Elsevier. 2018; 315–47.
3. Arias-Agudelo LM, González F, Isaza JP, Alzate JF, Pabón-Mora N. Plastome reduction and gene content in New World Pilostyles (Apodanthaceae) unveils high similarities to african and australian congeners. Mol phylogenet Evol. 2019;135:193–202.
4. Bellot S, Renner SS. The plastomes of two species in the endoparasite genus Pilostyles (Apodanthaceae) each retain just five or six possibly functional genes. GBE. 2016;8:189–201.
5. Su H-J, Barkman TJ, Hao W, Jones SS, Naumann J, Skippington E, Wafula EK, Hu J-M, Palmer JD, DePamphilis CW. Novel genetic code and record-setting AT-richness in the highly reduced plastid genome of the holoparasitic plant Balanophora. Proc Natl Acad Sci. 2019;116:934–43.
Cited by
1 articles.
订阅此论文施引文献
订阅此论文施引文献,注册后可以免费订阅5篇论文的施引文献,订阅后可以查看论文全部施引文献