Abstract

BackgroundZingiberoideae is a large and diverse subfamily of the family Zingiberaceae. Four genera in subfamily Zingiberoideae each possess 50 or more species, including Globba (100), Hedychium (> 80), Kaempferia (50) and Zingiber (150). Despite the agricultural, medicinal and horticultural importance of these species, genomic resources and suitable molecular markers for them are currently sparse.ResultsHere, we have sequenced, assembled and analyzed ten complete chloroplast genomes from nine species of subfamily Zingiberoideae: Globba lancangensis, Globba marantina, Globba multiflora, Globba schomburgkii, Globba schomburgkii var. angustata, Hedychium coccineum, Hedychium neocarneum, Kaempferia rotunda ‘Red Leaf’, Kaempferia rotunda ‘Silver Diamonds’ and Zingiber recurvatum. These ten chloroplast genomes (size range 162,630–163,968 bp) possess typical quadripartite structures that consist of a large single copy (LSC, 87,172–88,632 bp), a small single copy (SSC, 15,393–15,917 bp) and a pair of inverted repeats (IRs, 29,673–29,833 bp). The genomes contain 111–113 different genes, including 79 protein coding genes, 28–30 tRNAs and 4 rRNA genes. The dynamics of the genome structures, gene contents, amino acid frequencies, codon usage patterns, RNA editing sites, simple sequence repeats and long repeats exhibit similarities, with slight differences observed among the ten genomes. Further comparative analysis of seventeen related Zingiberoideae species, 12 divergent hotspots are identified. Positive selection is observed in 14 protein coding genes, including accD, ccsA, ndhA, ndhB, psbJ, rbcL, rpl20, rpoC1, rpoC2, rps12, rps18, ycf1, ycf2 and ycf4. Phylogenetic analyses, based on the complete chloroplast-derived single-nucleotide polymorphism data, strongly support that Globba, Hedychium, and Curcuma I + “the Kaempferia clade” consisting of Curcuma II, Kaempferia and Zingiber, form a nested evolutionary relationship in subfamily Zingiberoideae.ConclusionsOur study provides detailed information on ten complete Zingiberoideae chloroplast genomes, representing a valuable resource for future studies that seek to understand the molecular evolutionary dynamics in family Zingiberaceae. The identified divergent hotspots can be used for development of molecular markers for phylogenetic inference and species identification among closely related species within four genera of Globba, Hedychium, Kaempferia and Zingiber in subfamily Zingiberoideae.

Highlights

  • Zingiberoideae is a large and diverse subfamily of the family Zingiberaceae

  • The ten sequenced chloroplast genomes contain 140–141 predicted functional genes, which consist of 87 protein coding genes, 45–46 Transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, and 8 Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes (Tables 1, 2, Table S2)

  • A total of 111–113 different genes are detected in our 10 sequenced chloroplast genomes, including 79 protein coding genes, 28–30 tRNA genes, and 4 rRNA genes (Tables 1, 2, Table S2)

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Summary

Introduction

Zingiberoideae is a large and diverse subfamily of the family Zingiberaceae. Four genera in subfamily Zingiberoideae each possess 50 or more species, including Globba (100), Hedychium (> 80), Kaempferia (50) and Zingiber (150). Past studies of Zingiberaceae have primarily concentrated on morphological classification and resources [1, 4, 5], ecology [4], cultivation and propagation [3, 4], medicinal and ornamental uses [3,4,5,6,7], and phylogeny [2, 8,9,10,11] Among these phylogenetic investigations, several studies used nuclear internal transcribed spacer (ITS) and traditional chloroplast matK/ trnK-matK/trnL-trnF data to explore the phylogenetic relationships within subfamily Zingiberoideae [2, 8] and within the four genera of Globba, Hedychium, Kaempferia and Zingiber [2, 9,10,11]. Because of the lack of complete chloroplast genomic data for the genus Globba, no studies have focused on the structural or mutational dynamics of the chloroplast genomes among the four genera of Globba, Hedychium, Kaempferia and Zingiber in subfamily Zingiberoideae

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