Cargando…

Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species

Despite their ubiquity and functional importance, microsatellites have been largely ignored in comparative genomics, mostly due to the lack of genomic information. In the current study, microsatellite distribution was characterized and compared in the whole genomes and both the coding and non-coding...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Shi, Jiaqin, Huang, Shunmou, Fu, Donghui, Yu, Jinyin, Wang, Xinfa, Hua, Wei, Liu, Shengyi, Liu, Guihua, Wang, Hanzhong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3610691/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059988
_version_ 1782264491587665920
author Shi, Jiaqin
Huang, Shunmou
Fu, Donghui
Yu, Jinyin
Wang, Xinfa
Hua, Wei
Liu, Shengyi
Liu, Guihua
Wang, Hanzhong
author_facet Shi, Jiaqin
Huang, Shunmou
Fu, Donghui
Yu, Jinyin
Wang, Xinfa
Hua, Wei
Liu, Shengyi
Liu, Guihua
Wang, Hanzhong
author_sort Shi, Jiaqin
collection PubMed
description Despite their ubiquity and functional importance, microsatellites have been largely ignored in comparative genomics, mostly due to the lack of genomic information. In the current study, microsatellite distribution was characterized and compared in the whole genomes and both the coding and non-coding DNA sequences of the sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and other angiosperm species to investigate their evolutionary dynamics in plants. The variation in the microsatellite frequencies of these angiosperm species was much smaller than those for their microsatellite numbers and genome sizes, suggesting that microsatellite frequency may be relatively stable in plants. The microsatellite frequencies of these angiosperm species were significantly negatively correlated with both their genome sizes and transposable elements contents. The pattern of microsatellite distribution may differ according to the different genomic regions (such as coding and non-coding sequences). The observed differences in many important microsatellite characteristics (especially the distribution with respect to motif length, type and repeat number) of these angiosperm species were generally accordant with their phylogenetic distance, which suggested that the evolutionary dynamics of microsatellite distribution may be generally consistent with plant divergence/evolution. Importantly, by comparing these microsatellite characteristics (especially the distribution with respect to motif type) the angiosperm species (aside from a few species) all clustered into two obviously different groups that were largely represented by monocots and dicots, suggesting a complex and generally dichotomous evolutionary pattern of microsatellite distribution in angiosperms. Polyploidy may lead to a slight increase in microsatellite frequency in the coding sequences and a significant decrease in microsatellite frequency in the whole genome/non-coding sequences, but have little effect on the microsatellite distribution with respect to motif length, type and repeat number. Interestingly, several microsatellite characteristics seemed to be constant in plant evolution, which can be well explained by the general biological rules.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3610691
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2013
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-36106912013-04-03 Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species Shi, Jiaqin Huang, Shunmou Fu, Donghui Yu, Jinyin Wang, Xinfa Hua, Wei Liu, Shengyi Liu, Guihua Wang, Hanzhong PLoS One Research Article Despite their ubiquity and functional importance, microsatellites have been largely ignored in comparative genomics, mostly due to the lack of genomic information. In the current study, microsatellite distribution was characterized and compared in the whole genomes and both the coding and non-coding DNA sequences of the sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and other angiosperm species to investigate their evolutionary dynamics in plants. The variation in the microsatellite frequencies of these angiosperm species was much smaller than those for their microsatellite numbers and genome sizes, suggesting that microsatellite frequency may be relatively stable in plants. The microsatellite frequencies of these angiosperm species were significantly negatively correlated with both their genome sizes and transposable elements contents. The pattern of microsatellite distribution may differ according to the different genomic regions (such as coding and non-coding sequences). The observed differences in many important microsatellite characteristics (especially the distribution with respect to motif length, type and repeat number) of these angiosperm species were generally accordant with their phylogenetic distance, which suggested that the evolutionary dynamics of microsatellite distribution may be generally consistent with plant divergence/evolution. Importantly, by comparing these microsatellite characteristics (especially the distribution with respect to motif type) the angiosperm species (aside from a few species) all clustered into two obviously different groups that were largely represented by monocots and dicots, suggesting a complex and generally dichotomous evolutionary pattern of microsatellite distribution in angiosperms. Polyploidy may lead to a slight increase in microsatellite frequency in the coding sequences and a significant decrease in microsatellite frequency in the whole genome/non-coding sequences, but have little effect on the microsatellite distribution with respect to motif length, type and repeat number. Interestingly, several microsatellite characteristics seemed to be constant in plant evolution, which can be well explained by the general biological rules. Public Library of Science 2013-03-28 /pmc/articles/PMC3610691/ /pubmed/23555856 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059988 Text en © 2013 Shi et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Shi, Jiaqin
Huang, Shunmou
Fu, Donghui
Yu, Jinyin
Wang, Xinfa
Hua, Wei
Liu, Shengyi
Liu, Guihua
Wang, Hanzhong
Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species
title Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species
title_full Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species
title_fullStr Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species
title_full_unstemmed Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species
title_short Evolutionary Dynamics of Microsatellite Distribution in Plants: Insight from the Comparison of Sequenced Brassica, Arabidopsis and Other Angiosperm Species
title_sort evolutionary dynamics of microsatellite distribution in plants: insight from the comparison of sequenced brassica, arabidopsis and other angiosperm species
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3610691/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23555856
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0059988
work_keys_str_mv AT shijiaqin evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT huangshunmou evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT fudonghui evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT yujinyin evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT wangxinfa evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT huawei evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT liushengyi evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT liuguihua evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies
AT wanghanzhong evolutionarydynamicsofmicrosatellitedistributioninplantsinsightfromthecomparisonofsequencedbrassicaarabidopsisandotherangiospermspecies