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Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics

Asparagus species are widely used for medicinal, horticultural, and culinary purposes. Complete chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) genomes of three Asparagus specimens collected in Hong Kong—A. aethiopicus, A. densiflorus ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis—were de novo assembled using Illumina sequencing. Their s...

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Autores principales: Wong, Kwan-Ho, Kong, Bobby Lim-Ho, Siu, Tin-Yan, Wu, Hoi-Yan, But, Grace Wing-Chiu, Shaw, Pang‑Chui, Lau, David Tai-Wai
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9037925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35468142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266376
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author Wong, Kwan-Ho
Kong, Bobby Lim-Ho
Siu, Tin-Yan
Wu, Hoi-Yan
But, Grace Wing-Chiu
Shaw, Pang‑Chui
Lau, David Tai-Wai
author_facet Wong, Kwan-Ho
Kong, Bobby Lim-Ho
Siu, Tin-Yan
Wu, Hoi-Yan
But, Grace Wing-Chiu
Shaw, Pang‑Chui
Lau, David Tai-Wai
author_sort Wong, Kwan-Ho
collection PubMed
description Asparagus species are widely used for medicinal, horticultural, and culinary purposes. Complete chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) genomes of three Asparagus specimens collected in Hong Kong—A. aethiopicus, A. densiflorus ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis—were de novo assembled using Illumina sequencing. Their sizes ranged from 157,069 to 157,319 bp, with a total guanine–cytosine content of 37.5%. Structurally, a large single copy (84,598–85,350 bp) and a small single copy (18,677–18,685 bp) were separated by a pair of inverted repeats (26,518–26,573 bp). In total, 136 genes were annotated for A. aethiopicus and A. densiflorus ‘Myers’; these included 90 mRNA, 38 tRNA, and 8 rRNA genes. Further, 132 genes, including 87 mRNA, 37 tRNA, and 8 rRNA genes, were annotated for A. cochinchinensis. For comparative and phylogenetic analysis, we included NCBI data for four congenerics, A. setaceus, A. racemosus, A. schoberioides, and A. officinalis. The gene content, order, and genome structure were relatively conserved among the genomes studied. There were similarities in simple sequence repeats in terms of repeat type, sequence complementarity, and cpDNA partition distribution. A. densiflorus ‘Myers’ had distinctive long sequence repeats in terms of their quantity, type, and length-interval frequency. Divergence hotspots, with nucleotide diversity (Pi) ≥ 0.015, were identified in five genomic regions: accD-psaI, ccsA, trnS-trnG, ycf1, and ndhC-trnV. Here, we summarise the historical changes in the generic subdivision of Asparagus. Our phylogenetic analysis, which also elucidates the nomenclatural complexity of A. aethiopicus and A. densiflorus ‘Myers’, further supports their close phylogenetic relationship. The findings are consistent with prior generic subdivisions, except for the placement of A. racemosus, which requires further study. These de novo assembled cpDNA genomes contribute valuable genomic resources and help to elucidate Asparagus taxonomy.
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spelling pubmed-90379252022-04-26 Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics Wong, Kwan-Ho Kong, Bobby Lim-Ho Siu, Tin-Yan Wu, Hoi-Yan But, Grace Wing-Chiu Shaw, Pang‑Chui Lau, David Tai-Wai PLoS One Research Article Asparagus species are widely used for medicinal, horticultural, and culinary purposes. Complete chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) genomes of three Asparagus specimens collected in Hong Kong—A. aethiopicus, A. densiflorus ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis—were de novo assembled using Illumina sequencing. Their sizes ranged from 157,069 to 157,319 bp, with a total guanine–cytosine content of 37.5%. Structurally, a large single copy (84,598–85,350 bp) and a small single copy (18,677–18,685 bp) were separated by a pair of inverted repeats (26,518–26,573 bp). In total, 136 genes were annotated for A. aethiopicus and A. densiflorus ‘Myers’; these included 90 mRNA, 38 tRNA, and 8 rRNA genes. Further, 132 genes, including 87 mRNA, 37 tRNA, and 8 rRNA genes, were annotated for A. cochinchinensis. For comparative and phylogenetic analysis, we included NCBI data for four congenerics, A. setaceus, A. racemosus, A. schoberioides, and A. officinalis. The gene content, order, and genome structure were relatively conserved among the genomes studied. There were similarities in simple sequence repeats in terms of repeat type, sequence complementarity, and cpDNA partition distribution. A. densiflorus ‘Myers’ had distinctive long sequence repeats in terms of their quantity, type, and length-interval frequency. Divergence hotspots, with nucleotide diversity (Pi) ≥ 0.015, were identified in five genomic regions: accD-psaI, ccsA, trnS-trnG, ycf1, and ndhC-trnV. Here, we summarise the historical changes in the generic subdivision of Asparagus. Our phylogenetic analysis, which also elucidates the nomenclatural complexity of A. aethiopicus and A. densiflorus ‘Myers’, further supports their close phylogenetic relationship. The findings are consistent with prior generic subdivisions, except for the placement of A. racemosus, which requires further study. These de novo assembled cpDNA genomes contribute valuable genomic resources and help to elucidate Asparagus taxonomy. Public Library of Science 2022-04-25 /pmc/articles/PMC9037925/ /pubmed/35468142 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266376 Text en © 2022 Wong et al https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Wong, Kwan-Ho
Kong, Bobby Lim-Ho
Siu, Tin-Yan
Wu, Hoi-Yan
But, Grace Wing-Chiu
Shaw, Pang‑Chui
Lau, David Tai-Wai
Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
title Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
title_full Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
title_fullStr Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
title_full_unstemmed Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
title_short Complete chloroplast genomes of Asparagus aethiopicus L., A. densiflorus (Kunth) Jessop ‘Myers’, and A. cochinchinensis (Lour.) Merr.: Comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
title_sort complete chloroplast genomes of asparagus aethiopicus l., a. densiflorus (kunth) jessop ‘myers’, and a. cochinchinensis (lour.) merr.: comparative and phylogenetic analysis with congenerics
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9037925/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/35468142
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0266376
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