Evolution of 101 Apocynaceae plastomes and phylogenetic implications

[Display omitted] •The largest plastome dataset for Apocynaceae, representing all five subfamilies (grades), all 17 tribes and most subtribes.•Rather conserved plastome structures in Apocynaceae, with similar genome structures, gene orders, and GC contents.•Expansion of the inverted repeat (IR) regi...

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Published inMolecular phylogenetics and evolution Vol. 180; p. 107688
Main Authors Wang, Yan, Zhang, Cai-Fei, Ochieng Odago, Wyclif, Jiang, Hui, Yang, Jia-Xin, Hu, Guang-Wan, Wang, Qing-Feng
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.03.2023
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Summary:[Display omitted] •The largest plastome dataset for Apocynaceae, representing all five subfamilies (grades), all 17 tribes and most subtribes.•Rather conserved plastome structures in Apocynaceae, with similar genome structures, gene orders, and GC contents.•Expansion of the inverted repeat (IR) region found in tribes Alyxieae, Ceropegieae, and Marsdenieae.•Six types and 12 subtypes of IR/SC boundaries identified in Apocynaceae.•Fifteen major clades identified in the Apocynaceae backbone, mostly well-supported.•Periplocoideae embedded into the Apocynoid grade and sister to the EOM clade with higher support. Apocynaceae are one of the ten species-richest angiosperm families. However, the backbone phylogeny of the family is yet less well supported, and the evolution of plastome structure has not been thoroughly studied for the whole family. Herein, a total of 101 complete plastomes including 35 newly sequenced, 24 reassembled from public raw data and the rest from the NCBI GenBank database, representing 26 of 27 tribes of Apocynaceae, were used for comparative plastome analysis. Phylogenetic analyses were conducted using a combined plastid data matrix of 77 protein-coding genes from 162 taxa, encompassing all tribes and 41 of 49 subtribes of Apocynaceae. Plastome lengths ranged from 150,897 bp in Apocynum venetum to 178,616 bp in Hoya exilis. Six types of boundaries between the inverted repeat (IR) regions and single copy (SC) regions were identified. Different sizes of IR expansion were found in three lineages, including Alyxieae, Ceropegieae and Marsdenieae, suggesting multiple expansion events of the IRs over the SC regions in Apocynaceae. The IR regions of Marsdenieae evolved in two ways: expansion towards the large single copy (LSC) region in Lygisma + Stephanotis + Ruehssia + Gymnema (Cosmopolitan clade), and expansion towards both LSC and small single copy (SSC) region in Dischidia-Hoya alliance and Marsdenia (Asia-Pacific clade). Six coding genes and five non-coding regions were identified as highly variable, including accD, ccsA-ndhD, clpP, matK, ndhF, ndhG-ndhI, trnG(GCC)-trnfM(CAU), trnH(GUG)-psbA, trnY(GUA)-trnE(UUC), ycf1, and ycf2. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian phylogenetic analyses resulted in nearly identical tree topologies and produced a well-resolved backbone comprising 15 consecutive dichotomies that subdivided Apocynaceae into 15 clades. The subfamily Periplocoideae were embedded in the Apocynoid grade and were sister to the Echiteae-Odontadenieae-Mesechiteae clade with high support values. Three tribes (Melodineae, Vinceae, and Willughbeieae), the subtribe Amphineuriinae, and four genera (Beaumontia, Ceropegia, Hoya, and Stephanotis) were not resolved as monophyletic. Our work sheds light on the backbone phylogenetic relationships in the family Apocynaceae and offers insights into the evolution of Apocynaceae plastomes using the most densely sampled plastome dataset to date.
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ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107688