Abstract

BackgroundSequencing analysis of mitochondrial genomes is important for understanding the evolution and genome structures of various plant species. Barley is a self-pollinated diploid plant with seven chromosomes comprising a large haploid genome of 5.1 Gbp. Wild barley (Hordeum vulgare ssp. spontaneum) and cultivated barley (H. vulgare ssp. vulgare) have cross compatibility and closely related genomes, although a significant number of nucleotide polymorphisms have been reported between their genomes.ResultsWe determined the complete nucleotide sequences of the mitochondrial genomes of wild and cultivated barley. Two independent circular maps of the 525,599 bp barley mitochondrial genome were constructed by de novo assembly of high-throughput sequencing reads of barley lines H602 and Haruna Nijo, with only three SNPs detected between haplotypes. These mitochondrial genomes contained 33 protein-coding genes, three ribosomal RNAs, 16 transfer RNAs, 188 new ORFs, six major repeat sequences and several types of transposable elements. Of the barley mitochondrial genome-encoded proteins, NAD6, NAD9 and RPS4 had unique structures among grass species.ConclusionsThe mitochondrial genome of barley was similar to those of other grass species in terms of gene content, but the configuration of the genes was highly differentiated from that of other grass species. Mitochondrial genome sequencing is essential for annotating the barley nuclear genome; our mitochondrial sequencing identified a significant number of fragmented mitochondrial sequences in the reported nuclear genome sequences. Little polymorphism was detected in the barley mitochondrial genome sequences, which should be explored further to elucidate the evolution of barley.Electronic supplementary materialThe online version of this article (doi:10.1186/s12864-016-3159-3) contains supplementary material, which is available to authorized users.

Highlights

  • Sequencing analysis of mitochondrial genomes is important for understanding the evolution and genome structures of various plant species

  • We detected a high level of sequence identity between the two mitochondrial genomes; the mitochondrial genomes of these wild and cultivated barley lines were almost identical in terms of both nucleotide sequence and genome structure

  • The mitochondrial genome of barley was similar to those of other grass species in terms of gene content, but the configuration of the genes was quite different from that of wheat, which was used as a reference

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Summary

Introduction

Sequencing analysis of mitochondrial genomes is important for understanding the evolution and genome structures of various plant species. Barley is a self-pollinated diploid plant with seven chromosomes comprising a large haploid genome of 5.1 Gbp. Wild barley Vulgare) was domesticated from its wild ancestral form Cultivated and wild barley share closely related genomes that do not exhibit crossing or recombination barriers [3]. Ahokas [7] detected cytoplasmic male sterility, one of the main traits derived from the mitochondrial genome, in a wild barley germplasm. This finding indicates that the organellar genomes have differentiated in wild barley during its long evolutionary process

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