Complete sequencing of five araliaceae chloroplast genomes and the phylogenetic implications.

Resource Type: 
Publication
Publication Type: 
Journal Article
Title: 
Complete sequencing of five araliaceae chloroplast genomes and the phylogenetic implications.
Authors: 
Li R, Ma PF, Wen J, Yi TS
Series Name: 
PloS one
Journal Abbreviation: 
PLoS One
Volume: 
8
Issue: 
10
Page Numbers: 
e78568
Publication Year: 
2013
Publication Date: 
2013
DOI: 
10.1371/journal.pone.0078568
ISSN: 
1932-6203
EISSN: 
1932-6203
Citation: 
Li R, Ma PF, Wen J, Yi TS. Complete sequencing of five araliaceae chloroplast genomes and the phylogenetic implications.. PloS one. 2013; 8(10):e78568.
Abstract: 

BACKGROUND
The ginseng family (Araliaceae) includes a number of economically important plant species. Previously phylogenetic studies circumscribed three major clades within the core ginseng plant family, yet the internal relationships of each major group have been poorly resolved perhaps due to rapid radiation of these lineages. Recent studies have shown that phyogenomics based on chloroplast genomes provides a viable way to resolve complex relationships.

METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS
We report the complete nucleotide sequences of five Araliaceae chloroplast genomes using next-generation sequencing technology. The five chloroplast genomes are 156,333-156,459 bp in length including a pair of inverted repeats (25,551-26,108 bp) separated by the large single-copy (86,028-86,566 bp) and small single-copy (18,021-19,117 bp) regions. Each chloroplast genome contains the same 114 unique genes consisting of 30 transfer RNA genes, four ribosomal RNA genes, and 80 protein coding genes. Gene size, content, and order, AT content, and IR/SC boundary structure are similar among all Araliaceae chloroplast genomes. A total of 140 repeats were identified in the five chloroplast genomes with palindromic repeat as the most common type. Phylogenomic analyses using parsimony, likelihood, and Bayesian inference based on the complete chloroplast genomes strongly supported the monophyly of the Asian Palmate group and the Aralia-Panax group. Furthermore, the relationships among the sampled taxa within the Asian Palmate group were well resolved. Twenty-six DNA markers with the percentage of variable sites higher than 5% were identified, which may be useful for phylogenetic studies of Araliaceae.

CONCLUSION
The chloroplast genomes of Araliaceae are highly conserved in all aspects of genome features. The large-scale phylogenomic data based on the complete chloroplast DNA sequences is shown to be effective for the phylogenetic reconstruction of Araliaceae.

Publication Model: 
Electronic-eCollection
Language: 
English
Language Abbr: 
eng
Journal Country: 
United States