Authors
Andrew J Alverson, Danny W Rice, Stephanie Dickinson, Kerrie Barry, Jeffrey D Palmer
Publication date
2011/7/1
Journal
The Plant Cell
Volume
23
Issue
7
Pages
2499-2513
Publisher
American Society of Plant Biologists
Description
Members of the flowering plant family Cucurbitaceae harbor the largest known mitochondrial genomes. Here, we report the 1685-kb mitochondrial genome of cucumber (Cucumis sativus). We help solve a 30-year mystery about the origins of its large size by showing that it mainly reflects the proliferation of dispersed repeats, expansions of existing introns, and the acquisition of sequences from diverse sources, including the cucumber nuclear and chloroplast genomes, viruses, and bacteria. The cucumber genome has a novel structure for plant mitochondria, mapping as three entirely or largely autonomous circular chromosomes (lengths 1556, 84, and 45 kb) that vary in relative abundance over a twofold range. These properties suggest that the three chromosomes replicate independently of one another. The two smaller chromosomes are devoid of known functional genes but nonetheless contain diagnostic …
Total citations
20112012201320142015201620172018201920202021202220232024125161425281914311627283024
Scholar articles