Authors
Susann Wicke, Kai F Müller, Claude W de Pamphilis, Dietmar Quandt, Norman J Wickett, Yan Zhang, Susanne S Renner, Gerald M Schneeweiss
Publication date
2013/10/1
Journal
The Plant Cell
Volume
25
Issue
10
Pages
3711-3725
Publisher
American Society of Plant Biologists
Description
Nonphotosynthetic plants possess strongly reconfigured plastomes attributable to convergent losses of photosynthesis and housekeeping genes, making them excellent systems for studying genome evolution under relaxed selective pressures. We report the complete plastomes of 10 photosynthetic and nonphotosynthetic parasites plus their nonparasitic sister from the broomrape family (Orobanchaceae). By reconstructing the history of gene losses and genome reconfigurations, we find that the establishment of obligate parasitism triggers the relaxation of selective constraints. Partly because of independent losses of one inverted repeat region, Orobanchaceae plastomes vary 3.5-fold in size, with 45 kb in American squawroot (Conopholis americana) representing the smallest plastome reported from land plants. Of the 42 to 74 retained unique genes, only 16 protein genes, 15 tRNAs, and four rRNAs are …
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