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The Mitochondrial Genome of Eleusine indica and Characterization of Gene Content within Poaceae.


ABSTRACT: Plant mitochondrial (mt) genome assembly provides baseline data on size, structure, and gene content, but resolving the sequence of these large and complex organelle genomes remains challenging due to fragmentation, frequent recombination, and transfers of DNA from neighboring plastids. The mt genome for Eleusine indica (Poaceae: goosegrass) is comprehensibly analyzed here, providing key reference data for an economically significant invasive species that is also the maternal parent of the allotetraploid crop Finger millet (Eleusine coracana). The assembled E. indica genome contains 33 protein coding genes, 6 rRNA subunits, 24 tRNA, 8 large repetitive regions 15?kb of transposable elements across a total of 520,691?bp. Evidence of RNA editing and loss of rpl2, rpl5, rps14, rps11, sdh4, and sdh3 genes is evaluated in the context of an updated survey of mt genomic gene content across the grasses through an analysis of publicly available data. Hypothesized patterns of Poaceae mt gene loss are examined in a phylogenetic context to clarify timing, showing that rpl2 was transferred to the nucleus from the mitochondrion prior to the origin of the PACMAD clade.

SUBMITTER: Hall ND 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC7145533 | biostudies-literature | 2020 Jan

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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The Mitochondrial Genome of Eleusine indica and Characterization of Gene Content within Poaceae.

Hall Nathan D ND   Zhang Hui H   Mower Jeffrey P JP   McElroy Joseph Scott JS   Goertzen Leslie R LR  

Genome biology and evolution 20200101 1


Plant mitochondrial (mt) genome assembly provides baseline data on size, structure, and gene content, but resolving the sequence of these large and complex organelle genomes remains challenging due to fragmentation, frequent recombination, and transfers of DNA from neighboring plastids. The mt genome for Eleusine indica (Poaceae: goosegrass) is comprehensibly analyzed here, providing key reference data for an economically significant invasive species that is also the maternal parent of the allot  ...[more]

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