Abstract

Artemisia selengenesis is not only a health food, but also a well-known traditional Chinese medicine. Only a fraction of the chloroplast (cp) genome data of Artemisia has been reported and chloroplast genomic materials have been widely used in genomic evolution studies, molecular marker development, and phylogenetic analysis of the genus Artemisia, which makes evolutionary studies, genetic improvement, and phylogenetic identification very difficult. In this study, the complete chloroplast genome of A. selengensis was compared with that of other species within Artemisia and phylogenetic analyses was conducted with other genera in the Asteraceae family. The results showed that A. selengensis is an AT-rich species and has a typical quadripartite structure that is 151,215 bp in length. Comparative genome analyses demonstrated that the available chloroplast genomes of species of Artemisia were well conserved in terms of genomic length, GC contents, and gene organization and order. However, some differences, which may indicate evolutionary events, were found, such as a re-inversion event within the Artemisia genus, an unequal duplicate phenomenon of the ycf1 gene because of the expansion and contraction of the IR region, and the fast-evolving regions. Repeated sequences analysis showed that Artemisia chloroplast genomes presented a highly similar pattern of SSR or LDR distribution. A total of 257 SSRs and 42 LDRs were identified in the A. selengensis chloroplast genome. The phylogenetic analysis showed that A. selengensis was sister to A. gmelinii. The findings of this study will be valuable in further studies to understand the genetic diversity and evolutionary history of Asteraceae.

Highlights

  • Asteraceae, the largest and the most diverse flowering plant family, currently has 32,913 accepted species in 1,911 genera and 13 subfamilies [1,2,3]

  • The results showed that the closest species to A. selengensis was A. capillaris (0.0017), A. argyi (0.0027), A. gmelinii (0.0040), A. montana, and A. fukudo (0.0006), and A. gmelinii and A. montana (0.0042) in the complete cp genome, LDRs regions were introns of ycf3 (LSC), SSC, IR, and 72 shared-protein-sequences trees, respectively

  • In our study, we noticed that the SSC region of five species within the Artemisia genus had no rearrangement but was inverted in comparison with other genera in the Asteraceae family

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Summary

Introduction

Asteraceae, the largest and the most diverse flowering plant family, currently has 32,913 accepted species in 1,911 genera and 13 subfamilies [1,2,3]. (Asteraceae), as the largest genus in the Tribe Anthemideae, is widespread in mid- to high-latitudes and even dominates most cold and many warm deserts in the Northern Hemisphere. Numerous species of Artemisia are used as herbal medicines in many countries.

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