Abstract
Non-functional trnF pseudogenes that rarely occur in embryophytes have been found in Solanaceae. We have sequenced the trnL-F intergenic spacer of four species of Solanum, and found duplicated regions of the original trnF gene. These repeats were 94-260 bp long causing large length variation in the trnL-F intergenic spacer resulting from differences in pseudogene copy number (2-4). The duplicated trnF regions are comprised of several highly structured motifs, which were partial residues, or entire parts of the Anticodon, T- and D-domains of the original gene, but all lacked the acceptor stems at the 5'- or 3'-end. Pseudogenes included several transitions and transversions in their sequences compared to the original trnF gene. Among pseudogene copies, T-domains were more frequent and fragmented than D-domain elements. Our results demonstrate that although chloroplast evolution is uniform such structural duplications in the sequences used for phylogenetic reconstructions should be treated with great caution.
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