Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex

Abstract The Triticum (wheat)–Aegilops (goatgrass) complex has been extensively studied, but the evolutionary history of polyploid wheats has not been fully elucidated. The chloroplast (cp) with maternal inheritance and homoplasy can simplify the sequence-based evolutionary inferences, but informati...

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Main Author: Yong-Bi Fu
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Nature Publishing Group 2021-07-01
Series:Scientific Reports
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94649-9
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spelling doaj-8024319122e8411fa7c6aa2c3f7bbabc2021-08-01T11:26:36ZengNature Publishing GroupScientific Reports2045-23222021-07-0111111510.1038/s41598-021-94649-9Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complexYong-Bi Fu0Plant Gene Resources of Canada, Saskatoon Research and Development Centre, Agriculture and Agri-Food CanadaAbstract The Triticum (wheat)–Aegilops (goatgrass) complex has been extensively studied, but the evolutionary history of polyploid wheats has not been fully elucidated. The chloroplast (cp) with maternal inheritance and homoplasy can simplify the sequence-based evolutionary inferences, but informative inferences would require a complete and accurate cp genome sequence. In this study, 16 cp genomes representing five Aegilops and 11 Triticum species and subspecies were sequenced, assembled and annotated, yielding five novel circular cp genome sequences. Analyzing the assembled cp genomes revealed no marked differences in genome structure and gene arrangement across the assayed species. A polymorphism analysis of 72 published cp genome sequences representing 10 Aegilops and 15 Triticum species and subspecies detected 1183 SNPs and 1881 SSRs. More than 80% SNPs detected resided on the downstream and upstream gene regions and only 2.78% or less SNPs were predicted to be deleterious. The largest nucleotide diversity was observed in the short single-copy genomic region. Relatively weak selection pressure on cp coding genes was detected. Different phylogenetic analyses confirmed that the maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex had three deep lineages each representing a diploid species with nuclear A, B, or D genome. Dating the maternal divergence yielded age estimates of divergence that matched well with those reported previously. The divergence between emmer and bread wheats occurred at 8200–11,200 years ago. These findings are useful for further genomic studies, provide insight into cp genome evolvability and allow for better understanding of the maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex.https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94649-9
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Yong-Bi Fu
spellingShingle Yong-Bi Fu
Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex
Scientific Reports
author_facet Yong-Bi Fu
author_sort Yong-Bi Fu
title Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex
title_short Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex
title_full Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex
title_fullStr Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex
title_full_unstemmed Characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex
title_sort characterizing chloroplast genomes and inferring maternal divergence of the triticum–aegilops complex
publisher Nature Publishing Group
series Scientific Reports
issn 2045-2322
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Abstract The Triticum (wheat)–Aegilops (goatgrass) complex has been extensively studied, but the evolutionary history of polyploid wheats has not been fully elucidated. The chloroplast (cp) with maternal inheritance and homoplasy can simplify the sequence-based evolutionary inferences, but informative inferences would require a complete and accurate cp genome sequence. In this study, 16 cp genomes representing five Aegilops and 11 Triticum species and subspecies were sequenced, assembled and annotated, yielding five novel circular cp genome sequences. Analyzing the assembled cp genomes revealed no marked differences in genome structure and gene arrangement across the assayed species. A polymorphism analysis of 72 published cp genome sequences representing 10 Aegilops and 15 Triticum species and subspecies detected 1183 SNPs and 1881 SSRs. More than 80% SNPs detected resided on the downstream and upstream gene regions and only 2.78% or less SNPs were predicted to be deleterious. The largest nucleotide diversity was observed in the short single-copy genomic region. Relatively weak selection pressure on cp coding genes was detected. Different phylogenetic analyses confirmed that the maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex had three deep lineages each representing a diploid species with nuclear A, B, or D genome. Dating the maternal divergence yielded age estimates of divergence that matched well with those reported previously. The divergence between emmer and bread wheats occurred at 8200–11,200 years ago. These findings are useful for further genomic studies, provide insight into cp genome evolvability and allow for better understanding of the maternal divergence of the Triticum–Aegilops complex.
url https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94649-9
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