Abstract

BackgroundRhazya stricta is native to arid regions in South Asia and the Middle East and is used extensively in folk medicine to treat a wide range of diseases. In addition to generating genomic resources for this medicinally important plant, analyses of the complete plastid and mitochondrial genomes and a nuclear transcriptome from Rhazya provide insights into inter-compartmental transfers between genomes and the patterns of evolution among eight asterid mitochondrial genomes.ResultsThe 154,841 bp plastid genome is highly conserved with gene content and order identical to the ancestral organization of angiosperms. The 548,608 bp mitochondrial genome exhibits a number of phenomena including the presence of recombinogenic repeats that generate a multipartite organization, transferred DNA from the plastid and nuclear genomes, and bidirectional DNA transfers between the mitochondrion and the nucleus. The mitochondrial genes sdh3 and rps14 have been transferred to the nucleus and have acquired targeting presequences. In the case of rps14, two copies are present in the nucleus; only one has a mitochondrial targeting presequence and may be functional. Phylogenetic analyses of both nuclear and mitochondrial copies of rps14 across angiosperms suggests Rhazya has experienced a single transfer of this gene to the nucleus, followed by a duplication event. Furthermore, the phylogenetic distribution of gene losses and the high level of sequence divergence in targeting presequences suggest multiple, independent transfers of both sdh3 and rps14 across asterids. Comparative analyses of mitochondrial genomes of eight sequenced asterids indicates a complicated evolutionary history in this large angiosperm clade with considerable diversity in genome organization and size, repeat, gene and intron content, and amount of foreign DNA from the plastid and nuclear genomes.ConclusionsOrganelle genomes of Rhazya stricta provide valuable information for improving the understanding of mitochondrial genome evolution among angiosperms. The genomic data have enabled a rigorous examination of the gene transfer events. Rhazya is unique among the eight sequenced asterids in the types of events that have shaped the evolution of its mitochondrial genome. Furthermore, the organelle genomes of R. stricta provide valuable genomic resources for utilizing this important medicinal plant in biotechnology applications.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-405) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Rhazya stricta is native to arid regions in South Asia and the Middle East and is used extensively in folk medicine to treat a wide range of diseases

  • Rhazya stricta (Apocynaceae) is among the most economically important medicinal plants adapted to the arid regions of South Asia and the Middle East

  • The GC content is 37.6%, and the genome consists of 50.7% protein-coding genes, 41.6% non-coding regions, 1.8% transfer RNA (tRNA) and 5.8% ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes

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Summary

Introduction

Rhazya stricta is native to arid regions in South Asia and the Middle East and is used extensively in folk medicine to treat a wide range of diseases. Rhazya stricta (Apocynaceae) is among the most economically important medicinal plants adapted to the arid regions of South Asia and the Middle East. Currently there are no genomic resources for R. stricta to facilitate the development of this species for therapeutic applications using a natural products genomics approach [7,8]. Genomic resources that provide information about gene content and the metabolic pathways that produce compounds with pharmaceutical value are paramount to the potential for improvement and application of natural products as therapeutics

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