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Complete chloroplast DNA sequence from a Korean endemic genus, Megaleranthis saniculifolia, and its evolutionary implications

Authors
Kim, Young-KyuPark, Chong-wookKim, Ki-Joong
Issue Date
Mar-2009
Publisher
KOREAN SOC MOLECULAR & CELLULAR BIOLOGY
Keywords
base substitution rate; chloroplast genome; endangered genus in Korea; indel mutation; Megalreanthis; phylogeny; positional effect; simple sequence repeat; Trollius
Citation
MOLECULES AND CELLS, v.27, no.3, pp.365 - 381
Indexed
SCIE
SCOPUS
KCI
Journal Title
MOLECULES AND CELLS
Volume
27
Number
3
Start Page
365
End Page
381
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/120485
DOI
10.1007/s10059-009-0047-6
ISSN
1016-8478
Abstract
The chloroplast DNA sequences of Megaleranthis saniculifolia, an endemic and monotypic endangered plant species, were completed in this study (GenBank FJ597983). The genome is 159,924 bp in length. It harbors a pair of IR regions consisting of 26,608 bp each. The lengths of the LSC and SSC regions are 88,326 bp and 18,382 bp, respectively. The structural organizations, gene and intron contents, gene orders, AT contents, codon usages, and transcription units of the Megaleranthis chloroplast genome are similar to those of typical land plant cp DNAs. However, the detailed features of Megaleranthis chloroplast genomes are substantially different from that of Ranunculus, which belongs to the same family, the Ranunculaceae. First, the Megaleranthis cp DNA was 4,797 bp longer than that of Ranunculus due to an expanded IR region into the SSC region and duplicated sequence elements in several spacer regions of the Megaleranthis cp genome. Second, the chloroplast genomes of Megaleranthis and Ranunculus evidence 5.6% sequence divergence in the coding regions, 8.9% sequence divergence in the intron regions, and 18.7% sequence divergence in the intergenic spacer regions, respectively. In both the coding and noncoding regions, average nucleotide substitution rates differed markedly, depending on the genome position. Our data strongly implicate the positional effects of the evolutionary modes of chloroplast genes. The genes evidencing higher levels of base substitutions also have higher incidences of indel mutations and low Ka/Ks ratios. A total of 54 simple sequence repeat loci were identified from the Megaleranthis cp genome. The existence of rich cp SSR loci in the Megaleranthis cp genome provides a rare opportunity to study the population genetic structures of this endangered species. Our phylogenetic trees based on the two independent markers, the nuclear ITS and chloroplast matK sequences, strongly support the inclusion of the Megaleranthis to the Trollius. Therefore, our molecular trees support Ohwi's original treatment of Megaleranthis saniculiforia to Trollius chosenensis Ohwi.
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