Abstract
AbstractPlant mitochondrial genomes have excessive size relative to coding capacity, a low mutation rate in genes and a high rearrangement rate. They also have non-tandem repeats in two size groups: a few large repeats which cause isomerization of the genome by recombination, and numerous repeats longer than 50bp, often found in exactly two copies per genome. It appears that repeats in the size range from several hundred to a few thousand base pair are underrepresented. The repeats are not well-conserved between species, and are infrequently annotated in mitochondrial sequence assemblies. Because they are much larger than expected by chance we call them Repeats Of Unusual Size (ROUS). The repeats consist of two functional classes, those that are involved in genome isomerization through frequent crossing over, and those for which crossovers are rare unless there are mutations in DNA repair genes, or the rate of double-strand breakage is increased. We systematically described and compared these repeats, which are important clues to mechanisms of DNA maintenance in mitochondria. We developed a tool to find non-tandem repeats and analyzed the complete mitochondrial sequences from 135 plant species. We observed an interesting difference between taxa: the repeats are larger and more frequent in the vascular plants. Analysis of closely related species also shows that plant mitochondrial genomes evolve in dramatic bursts of breakage and rejoining, complete with DNA sequence gain and loss, and the repeats are included in these events. We suggest an adaptive explanation for the existence of the repeats and their evolution.
Publisher
Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory
Cited by
1 articles.
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