Comparative Plastome Analysis of Root- and Stem-Feeding Parasites of Santalales Untangle the Footprints of Feeding Mode and Lifestyle Transitions

Author:

Chen Xiaoli123ORCID,Fang Dongming123,Wu Chenyu123,Liu Bing4,Liu Yang15ORCID,Sahu Sunil Kumar123,Song Bo123,Yang Shuai16,Yang Tuo2,Wei Jinpu12,Wang Xuebing2,Zhang Wen2,Xu Qiwu127,Wang Huafeng8,Yuan Langxing8,Liao Xuezhu123,Chen Lipeng123,Chen Ziqiang9,Yuan Fu123,Chang Yue123,Lu Lihua10,Yang Huanming12,Wang Jian12,Xu Xun12,Liu Xin123,Wicke Susann11ORCID,Liu Huan123

Affiliation:

1. BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen, China

2. China National GeneBank, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen, China

3. State Key Laboratory of Agricultural Genomics, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen, China

4. State Key Laboratory of Systematic and Evolutionary Botany, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing, China

5. Fairylake Botanical Garden, Shenzhen & Chinese Academy of Sciences, Shenzhen, China

6. School of Basic Medical, Qingdao University, China

7. BGI-Qingdao, BGI-Shenzhen, Qingdao, China

8. Hainan Key Laboratory for Sustainable Utilization of Tropical Bioresources, Institute of Tropical Agriculture and Forestry, Hainan University, Haikou, China

9. College of Chinese Medicine Materials, Jilin Agricultural University, China

10. MGI, BGI-Shenzhen, Shenzhen, China

11. Institute for Evolution and Biodiversity, University of Muenster, Germany†These authors contributed equally to this work

Abstract

AbstractIn plants, parasitism triggers the reductive evolution of plastid genomes (plastomes). To disentangle the molecular evolutionary associations between feeding on other plants below- or aboveground and general transitions from facultative to obligate parasitism, we analyzed 34 complete plastomes of autotrophic, root- and stem-feeding hemiparasitic, and holoparasitic Santalales. We observed inexplicable losses of housekeeping genes and tRNAs in hemiparasites and dramatic genomic reconfiguration in holoparasitic Balanophoraceae, whose plastomes have exceptionally low GC contents. Genomic changes are related primarily to the evolution of hemi- or holoparasitism, whereas the transition from a root- to a stem-feeding mode plays no major role. In contrast, the rate of molecular evolution accelerates in a stepwise manner from autotrophs to root- and then stem-feeding parasites. Already the ancestral transition to root-parasitism coincides with a relaxation of selection in plastomes. Another significant selectional shift in plastid genes occurs as stem-feeders evolve, suggesting that this derived form coincides with trophic specialization despite the retention of photosynthetic capacity. Parasitic Santalales fill a gap in our understanding of parasitism-associated plastome degeneration. We reveal that lifestyle-genome associations unfold interdependently over trophic specialization and feeding mode transitions, where holoparasitic Balanophoraceae provide a system for exploring the functional realms of plastomes.

Funder

National Key Research and Development Program of China

Science, Technology and Innovation Commission of Shenzhen Municipality

Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Genome Read and Write

BGI-Shenzhen and China National

Emmy Noether-program of the German Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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