Abstract

BackgroundChloroplast genome sequence data is very useful in studying/addressing the phylogeny of plants at various taxonomic ranks. However, there are no empirical observations on the patterns, directions, and mutation rates, which are the key topics in chloroplast genome evolution. In this study, we used Calycanthaceae as a model to investigate the evolutionary patterns, directions and rates of both nucleotide substitutions and structural mutations at different taxonomic ranks.ResultsThere were 2861 polymorphic nucleotide sites on the five chloroplast genomes, and 98% of polymorphic sites were biallelic. There was a single-nucleotide substitution bias in chloroplast genomes. A → T or T → A (2.84%) and G → C or C → G (3.65%) were found to occur significantly less frequently than the other four transversion mutation types. Synonymous mutations kept balanced pace with nonsynonymous mutations, whereas biased directions appeared between transition and transversion mutations and among transversion mutations. Of the structural mutations, indels and repeats had obvious directions, but microsatellites and inversions were non-directional. Structural mutations increased the single nucleotide mutations rates. The mutation rates per site per year were estimated to be 0.14–0.34 × 10− 9 for nucleotide substitution at different taxonomic ranks, 0.64 × 10− 11 for indels and 1.0 × 10− 11 for repeats.ConclusionsOur direct counts of chloroplast genome evolution events provide raw data for correctly modeling the evolution of sequence data for phylogenetic inferences.

Highlights

  • Chloroplast genome sequence data is very useful in studying/addressing the phylogeny of plants at various taxonomic ranks

  • General features of the Calycanthaceae chloroplast genomes The structures of the four new chloroplast genomes were very similar to that of C. floridus (Supplementary Figure S1, Table 1)

  • All five genomes encoded 114 unique genes with identical gene order and gene clusters, 17 or 18 of them were duplicated in the inverted repeat (IR) region (Supplementary Table S4 and Figure S2)

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Chloroplast genome sequence data is very useful in studying/addressing the phylogeny of plants at various taxonomic ranks. There are no empirical observations on the patterns, directions, and mutation rates, which are the key topics in chloroplast genome evolution. We used Calycanthaceae as a model to investigate the evolutionary patterns, directions and rates of both nucleotide substitutions and structural mutations at different taxonomic ranks. Considerable attention has been paid to the evolution rate variations among genes or lineages [5, 6] The chloroplast genes such as ndhF, matK, rbcL and trnL-F have been well studied [7, 8]. The frequency of A and T at the 3rd codon position is fourfold of other nucleotides in the rbcL gene of angiosperms [8] This explains why the chloroplast genomes are usually A/T rich. Whether this observation is a general pattern or only a special case remains to be tested at genome level

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.