Plastome Structural Evolution and Homoplastic Inversions in Neo-Astragalus (Fabaceae)

Author:

Charboneau Joseph L M1ORCID,Cronn Richard C2,Liston Aaron3,Wojciechowski Martin F4,Sanderson Michael J1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Arizona, Tucson, Arizona, USA

2. Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Corvallis, Oregon, USA

3. Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, Oregon, USA

4. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, Arizona, USA

Abstract

Abstract The plastid genomes of photosynthetic green plants have largely maintained conserved gene content and order as well as structure over hundreds of millions of years of evolution. Several plant lineages, however, have departed from this conservation and contain many plastome structural rearrangements, which have been associated with an abundance of repeated sequences both overall and near rearrangement endpoints. We sequenced the plastomes of 25 taxa of Astragalus L. (Fabaceae), a large genus in the inverted repeat-lacking clade of legumes, to gain a greater understanding of the connection between repeats and plastome inversions. We found plastome repeat structure has a strong phylogenetic signal among these closely related taxa mostly in the New World clade of Astragalus called Neo-Astragalus. Taxa without inversions also do not differ substantially in their overall repeat structure from four taxa each with one large-scale inversion. For two taxa with inversion endpoints between the same pairs of genes, differences in their exact endpoints indicate the inversions occurred independently. Our proposed mechanism for inversion formation suggests the short inverted repeats now found near the endpoints of the four inversions may be there as a result of these inversions rather than their cause. The longer inverted repeats now near endpoints may have allowed the inversions first mediated by shorter microhomologous sequences to propagate, something that should be considered in explaining how any plastome rearrangement becomes fixed regardless of the mechanism of initial formation.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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