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1.
mSystems ; 9(2): e0118223, 2024 Feb 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38259099

ABSTRACT

In eusocial insects, the health of the queens-the colony founders and sole reproductive females-is a primary determinant for colony success. Queen failure in the honey bee Apis mellifera, for example, is a major concern of beekeepers who annually suffer colony losses, necessitating a greater knowledge of queen health. Several studies on the microbiome of honey bees have characterized its diversity and shown its importance for the health of worker bees, the female non-reproductive caste. However, the microbiome of workers differs from that of queens, which, in comparison, is still poorly studied. Thus, direct investigations of the queen microbiome are required to understand colony-level microbiome assembly, functional roles, and evolution. Here, we used metagenomics to comprehensively characterize the honey bee queen microbiome. Comparing samples from different geographic locations and breeder sources, we show that the microbiome of queens is mostly shaped by the environment experienced since early life and is predicted to play roles in the breakdown of the diet and protection from pathogens and xenobiotics. We also reveal that the microbiome of queens comprises only four candidate core bacterial species, Apilactobacillus kunkeei, Lactobacillus apis, Bombella apis, and Commensalibacter sp. Interestingly, in addition to bacteria, we show that bacteriophages infect the queen microbiome, for which Lactobacillaceae are predicted to be the main reservoirs. Together, our results provide the basis to understand the honey bee colony microbiome assemblage, can guide improvements in queen-rearing processes, and highlight the importance of considering bacteriophages for queen microbiome health and microbiome homeostasis in eusocial insects.IMPORTANCEThe queen caste plays a central role in colony success in eusocial insects, as queens lay eggs and regulate colony behavior and development. Queen failure can cause colonies to collapse, which is one of the major concerns of beekeepers. Thus, understanding the biology behind the queen's health is a pressing issue. Previous studies have shown that the bee microbiome plays an important role in worker bee health, but little is known about the queen microbiome and its function in vivo. Here, we characterized the queen microbiome, identifying for the first time the present species and their putative functions. We show that the queen microbiome has predicted nutritional and protective roles in queen association and comprises only four consistently present bacterial species. Additionally, we bring to attention the spread of phages in the queen microbiome, which increased in abundance in failing queens and may impact the fate of the colony.


Subject(s)
Bacteriophages , Microbiota , Bees , Female , Animals , Bacteriophages/genetics , Microbiota/genetics , Reproduction , Metagenome
2.
ISME J ; 16(9): 2160-2168, 2022 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35726020

ABSTRACT

Honey bees have suffered dramatic losses in recent years, largely due to multiple stressors underpinned by poor nutrition [1]. Nutritional stress especially harms larvae, who mature into workers unable to meet the needs of their colony [2]. In this study, we characterize the metabolic capabilities of a honey bee larvae-associated bacterium, Bombella apis (formerly Parasaccharibacter apium), and its effects on the nutritional resilience of larvae. We found that B. apis is the only bacterium associated with larvae that can withstand the antimicrobial larval diet. Further, we found that B. apis can synthesize all essential amino acids and significantly alters the amino acid content of synthetic larval diet, largely by supplying the essential amino acid lysine. Analyses of gene gain/loss across the phylogeny suggest that four amino acid transporters were gained in recent B. apis ancestors. In addition, the transporter LysE is conserved across all sequenced strains of B. apis. Finally, we tested the impact of B. apis on developing honey bee larvae subjected to nutritional stress and found that larvae supplemented with B. apis are bolstered against mass reduction despite limited nutrition. Together, these data suggest a novel role of B. apis as a nutritional mutualist of honey bee larvae.


Subject(s)
Dietary Supplements , Lysine , Animals , Bees , Diet , Larva/microbiology , Symbiosis
3.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34546865

ABSTRACT

Honey bees are important pollinators of many major crops and add billions of dollars annually to the US economy through their services. Recent declines in the health of the honey bee have startled researchers and lay people alike as honey bees are agriculture's most important pollinator. One factor that may influence colony health is the microbial community. Although honey bee worker guts have a characteristic community of bee-specific microbes, the honey bee queen digestive tracts are colonized predominantly by a single acetic acid bacterium tentatively named 'Parasaccharibacter apium'. This bacterium is related to flower-associated microbes such as Saccharibacter floricola, and initial phylogenetic analyses placed it as sister to these environmental bacteria. We used a combination of phylogenetic and sequence identity methods to better resolve evolutionary relationships among 'P. apium', strains in the genus Saccharibacter, and strains in the closely related genus Bombella. Interestingly, measures of genome-wide average nucleotide identity and aligned fraction, coupled with phylogenetic placement, indicate that many strains labelled as 'P. apium' and Saccharibacter species are all the same species as Bombella apis. We propose reclassifying these strains as Bombella apis and outline the data supporting that classification below.


Subject(s)
Acetobacteraceae , Fatty Acids , Acetobacteraceae/genetics , Animals , Bacterial Typing Techniques , Base Composition , Bees , DNA, Bacterial/genetics , Fatty Acids/chemistry , Phylogeny , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA
4.
Viruses ; 13(8)2021 07 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34452330

ABSTRACT

Eukaryotic nucleic acid methyltransferase (MTase) proteins are essential mediators of epigenetic and epitranscriptomic regulation. DNMT2 belongs to a large, conserved family of DNA MTases found in many organisms, including holometabolous insects such as fruit flies and mosquitoes, where it is the lone MTase. Interestingly, despite its nomenclature, DNMT2 is not a DNA MTase, but instead targets and methylates RNA species. A growing body of literature suggests that DNMT2 mediates the host immune response against a wide range of pathogens, including RNA viruses. Curiously, although DNMT2 is antiviral in Drosophila, its expression promotes virus replication in mosquito species. We, therefore, sought to understand the divergent regulation, function, and evolution of these orthologs. We describe the role of the Drosophila-specific host protein IPOD in regulating the expression and function of fruit fly DNMT2. Heterologous expression of these orthologs suggests that DNMT2's role as an antiviral is host-dependent, indicating a requirement for additional host-specific factors. Finally, we identify and describe potential evidence of positive selection at different times throughout DNMT2 evolution within dipteran insects. We identify specific codons within each ortholog that are under positive selection and find that they are restricted to four distinct protein domains, which likely influence substrate binding, target recognition, and adaptation of unique intermolecular interactions. Collectively, our findings highlight the evolution of DNMT2 in Dipteran insects and point to structural, regulatory, and functional differences between mosquito and fruit fly homologs.


Subject(s)
DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/genetics , Diptera/genetics , Drosophila Proteins/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/enzymology , Drosophila melanogaster/microbiology , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Wolbachia/physiology , Adaptation, Biological , Aedes/enzymology , Aedes/genetics , Aedes/immunology , Aedes/microbiology , Amino Acid Sequence , Animals , DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/chemistry , DNA (Cytosine-5-)-Methyltransferases/immunology , Diptera/classification , Diptera/enzymology , Diptera/immunology , Drosophila Proteins/chemistry , Drosophila Proteins/immunology , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/immunology , Evolution, Molecular , Phylogeny , Protein Conformation , Sequence Alignment , Wolbachia/genetics
5.
J Bacteriol ; 202(4)2020 01 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31659008

ABSTRACT

The most common intracellular symbiont on the planet-Wolbachia pipientis-is infamous largely for the reproductive manipulations induced in its host. However, more recent evidence suggests that this bacterium may also serve as a nutritional mutualist in certain host backgrounds and for certain metabolites. We performed a large-scale analysis of conserved gene content across all sequenced Wolbachia genomes to infer potential nutrients made by these symbionts. We review and critically evaluate the prior research supporting a beneficial role for Wolbachia and suggest future experiments to test hypotheses of metabolic provisioning.


Subject(s)
Symbiosis/physiology , Wolbachia/physiology , Adenosine Triphosphate/metabolism , Biological Transport , Genome, Bacterial , Heme/metabolism , Nutritional Physiological Phenomena , Wolbachia/genetics
6.
Genome Biol Evol ; 10(2): 434-451, 2018 02 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29351633

ABSTRACT

The bacterial endosymbiont Wolbachia manipulates arthropod reproduction to facilitate its maternal spread through host populations. The most common manipulation is cytoplasmic incompatibility (CI): Wolbachia-infected males produce modified sperm that cause embryonic mortality, unless rescued by embryos harboring the same Wolbachia. The genes underlying CI, cifA and cifB, were recently identified in the eukaryotic association module of Wolbachia's prophage WO. Here, we use transcriptomic and genomic approaches to address three important evolutionary facets of the cif genes. First, we assess whether or not cifA and cifB comprise a classic toxin-antitoxin operon in wMel and show that the two genes exhibit striking, transcriptional differences across host development. They can produce a bicistronic message despite a predicted hairpin termination element in their intergenic region. Second, cifA and cifB strongly coevolve across the diversity of phage WO. Third, we provide new domain and functional predictions across homologs within Wolbachia, and show that amino acid sequences vary substantially across the genus. Finally, we investigate conservation of cifA and cifB and find frequent degradation and loss of the genes in strains that no longer induce CI. Taken together, we demonstrate that cifA and cifB exhibit complex transcriptional regulation in wMel, provide functional annotations that broaden the potential mechanisms of CI induction, and report recurrent erosion of cifA and cifB in non-CI strains, thus expanding our understanding of the most widespread form of reproductive parasitism.


Subject(s)
Arthropods/microbiology , Genes, Viral , Prophages/genetics , Wolbachia/virology , Animals , Arthropods/physiology , Evolution, Molecular , Male , Reproduction , Symbiosis , Transcriptome , Wolbachia/genetics , Wolbachia/physiology
7.
Genome Biol Evol ; 9(7): 1925-1937, 2017 07 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28854601

ABSTRACT

Wolbachia pipientis is an intracellular symbiont of arthropods well known for the reproductive manipulations induced in the host and, more recently, for the ability of Wolbachia to block virus replication in insect vectors. Since Wolbachia cannot yet be genetically manipulated, and due to the constraints imposed when working with an intracellular symbiont, little is known about mechanisms used by Wolbachia for host interaction. Here we employed a bioinformatics pipeline and identified 163 candidate effectors, potentially secreted by Wolbachia into the host cell. A total of 84 of these candidates were then subjected to a screen of growth defects induced in yeast upon heterologous expression which identified 14 top candidates likely secreted by Wolbachia. These predicted secreted effectors may function in concert as we find that their native expression is correlated and is highly upregulated at specific time points during Drosophila development. In addition, the evolutionary histories of some of these predicted effectors are also correlated, suggesting they may function together, or in the same pathway, during host infection. Similarly, most of these predicted effectors are limited to one or two Wolbachia strains-perhaps reflecting shared evolutionary history and strain specific functions in host manipulation. Identification of these Wolbachia candidate effectors is the first step in dissecting the mechanisms of symbiont-host interaction in this important system.


Subject(s)
Bacterial Proteins/metabolism , Computational Biology/methods , Drosophila melanogaster/microbiology , Wolbachia/metabolism , Animals , Bacterial Proteins/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/genetics , Drosophila melanogaster/metabolism , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Genetic Association Studies , Host-Pathogen Interactions , Phylogeny , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/genetics , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/growth & development , Symbiosis , Wolbachia/genetics
8.
BMC Plant Biol ; 17(1): 49, 2017 02 21.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28222679

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Aerobically respiring eukaryotes usually contain four respiratory-chain complexes (complexes I-IV) and an ATP synthase (complex V). In several lineages of aerobic microbial eukaryotes, complex I has been lost, with an alternative, nuclear-encoded NADH dehydrogenase shown in certain cases to bypass complex I and oxidize NADH without proton translocation. The first loss of complex I in any multicellular eukaryote was recently reported in two studies; one sequenced the complete mitogenome of the hemiparasitic aerial mistletoe, Viscum scurruloideum, and the other sequenced the V. album mitogenome. The V. scurruloideum study reported no significant additional loss of mitochondrial genes or genetic function, but the V. album study postulated that mitochondrial genes encoding all ribosomal RNAs and proteins of all respiratory complexes are either absent or pseudogenes, thus raising questions as to whether the mitogenome and oxidative respiration are functional in this plant. RESULTS: To determine whether these opposing conclusions about the two Viscum mitogenomes reflect a greater degree of reductive/degenerative evolution in V. album or instead result from interpretative and analytical differences, we reannotated and reanalyzed the V. album mitogenome and compared it with the V. scurruloideum mitogenome. We find that the two genomes share a complete complement of mitochondrial rRNA genes and a typical complement of genes encoding respiratory complexes II-V. Most Viscum mitochondrial protein genes exhibit very high levels of divergence yet are evolving under purifying, albeit relaxed selection. We discover two cases of horizontal gene transfer in V. album and show that the two Viscum mitogenomes differ by 8.6-fold in size (66 kb in V. scurruloideum; 565 kb in V. album). CONCLUSIONS: Viscum mitogenomes are extraordinary compared to other plant mitogenomes in terms of their wide size range, high rates of synonymous substitutions, degree of relaxed selection, and unprecedented loss of respiratory complex I. However, contrary to the initial conclusions regarding V. album, both Viscum mitogenomes possess conventional sets of rRNA and, excepting complex I, respiratory genes. Both plants should therefore be able to carry out aerobic respiration. Moreover, with respect to size, the V. scurruloideum mitogenome has experienced a greater level of reductive evolution.


Subject(s)
Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Genetic Variation , Genome, Plant , Viscum/genetics , DNA, Plant , Electron Transport Chain Complex Proteins/genetics , Electron Transport Complex I/metabolism , Gene Deletion , Genes, Plant , Genome, Mitochondrial , Molecular Sequence Annotation , Plant Proteins/genetics , RNA, Plant , RNA, Ribosomal , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity , Viscum/metabolism , Viscum album/genetics , Viscum album/metabolism
9.
PLoS One ; 10(11): e0137532, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26618775

ABSTRACT

Sequencing of the 4-Mb mitochondrial genome of the angiosperm Amborella trichopoda has shown that it contains unprecedented amounts of foreign mitochondrial DNA, including four blocks of sequences that together correspond almost perfectly to one entire moss mitochondrial genome. This implies whole-genome transfer from a single moss donor but conflicts with phylogenetic results from an earlier, PCR-based study that suggested three different moss donors to Amborella. To resolve this conflict, we conducted an expanded set of phylogenetic analyses with respect to both moss lineages and mitochondrial loci. The moss DNA in Amborella was consistently placed in either of two positions, depending on the locus analyzed, as sister to the Ptychomniales or within the Hookeriales. This agrees with two of the three previously suggested donors, whereas the third is no longer supported. These results, combined with synteny analyses and other considerations, lead us to favor a model involving two successive moss-to-Amborella whole-genome transfers, followed by recombination that produced a single intact and chimeric moss mitochondrial genome integrated in the Amborella mitochondrial genome. Eight subsequent recombination events account for the state of fragmentation, rearrangement, duplication, and deletion of this chimeric moss mitochondrial genome as it currently exists in Amborella. Five of these events are associated with short-to-intermediate sized repeats. Two of the five probably occurred by reciprocal homologous recombination, whereas the other three probably occurred in a non-reciprocal manner via microhomology-mediated break-induced replication (MMBIR). These findings reinforce and extend recent evidence for an important role of MMBIR in plant mitochondrial DNA evolution.


Subject(s)
Genome, Mitochondrial , Genome, Plant , Magnoliopsida/genetics , Chimera , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Plant/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Phylogeny , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Synteny
10.
G3 (Bethesda) ; 5(12): 2843-56, 2015 Oct 23.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26497146

ABSTRACT

Symbiotic interactions between microbes and their multicellular hosts have manifold biological consequences. To better understand how bacteria maintain symbiotic associations with animal hosts, we analyzed genome-wide gene expression for the endosymbiotic α-proteobacteria Wolbachia pipientis across the entire life cycle of Drosophila melanogaster. We found that the majority of Wolbachia genes are expressed stably across the D. melanogaster life cycle, but that 7.8% of Wolbachia genes exhibit robust stage- or sex-specific expression differences when studied in the whole-organism context. Differentially-expressed Wolbachia genes are typically up-regulated after Drosophila embryogenesis and include many bacterial membrane, secretion system, and ankyrin repeat-containing proteins. Sex-biased genes are often organized as small operons of uncharacterized genes and are mainly up-regulated in adult Drosophila males in an age-dependent manner. We also systematically investigated expression levels of previously-reported candidate genes thought to be involved in host-microbe interaction, including those in the WO-A and WO-B prophages and in the Octomom region, which has been implicated in regulating bacterial titer and pathogenicity. Our work provides comprehensive insight into the developmental dynamics of gene expression for a widespread endosymbiont in its natural host context, and shows that public gene expression data harbor rich resources to probe the functional basis of the Wolbachia-Drosophila symbiosis and annotate the transcriptional outputs of the Wolbachia genome.


Subject(s)
Drosophila melanogaster/growth & development , Gene Expression Regulation, Bacterial , Wolbachia/genetics , Animals , Cluster Analysis , Computational Biology , Drosophila melanogaster/microbiology , Gene Expression Profiling , Genome, Bacterial , High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing , Host-Pathogen Interactions/genetics , Life Cycle Stages , Phylogeny , Stress, Physiological/genetics , Symbiosis , Transcriptome
11.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 112(27): E3515-24, 2015 Jul 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26100885

ABSTRACT

Despite the enormous diversity among parasitic angiosperms in form and structure, life-history strategies, and plastid genomes, little is known about the diversity of their mitogenomes. We report the sequence of the wonderfully bizarre mitogenome of the hemiparasitic aerial mistletoe Viscum scurruloideum. This genome is only 66 kb in size, making it the smallest known angiosperm mitogenome by a factor of more than three and the smallest land plant mitogenome. Accompanying this size reduction is exceptional reduction of gene content. Much of this reduction arises from the unexpected loss of respiratory complex I (NADH dehydrogenase), universally present in all 300+ other angiosperms examined, where it is encoded by nine mitochondrial and many nuclear nad genes. Loss of complex I in a multicellular organism is unprecedented. We explore the potential relationship between this loss in Viscum and its parasitic lifestyle. Despite its small size, the Viscum mitogenome is unusually rich in recombinationally active repeats, possessing unparalleled levels of predicted sublimons resulting from recombination across short repeats. Many mitochondrial gene products exhibit extraordinary levels of divergence in Viscum, indicative of highly relaxed if not positive selection. In addition, all Viscum mitochondrial protein genes have experienced a dramatic acceleration in synonymous substitution rates, consistent with the hypothesis of genomic streamlining in response to a high mutation rate but completely opposite to the pattern seen for the high-rate but enormous mitogenomes of Silene. In sum, the Viscum mitogenome possesses a unique constellation of extremely unusual features, a subset of which may be related to its parasitic lifestyle.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Electron Transport Complex I/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Plant Proteins/genetics , Viscum/genetics , Base Sequence , DNA, Mitochondrial/classification , Genes, Mitochondrial/genetics , Genetic Variation , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , RNA, Plant/genetics , RNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Sequence Homology, Nucleic Acid
12.
Science ; 342(6165): 1468-73, 2013 Dec 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24357311

ABSTRACT

We report the complete mitochondrial genome sequence of the flowering plant Amborella trichopoda. This enormous, 3.9-megabase genome contains six genome equivalents of foreign mitochondrial DNA, acquired from green algae, mosses, and other angiosperms. Many of these horizontal transfers were large, including acquisition of entire mitochondrial genomes from three green algae and one moss. We propose a fusion-compatibility model to explain these findings, with Amborella capturing whole mitochondria from diverse eukaryotes, followed by mitochondrial fusion (limited mechanistically to green plant mitochondria) and then genome recombination. Amborella's epiphyte load, propensity to produce suckers from wounds, and low rate of mitochondrial DNA loss probably all contribute to the high level of foreign DNA in its mitochondrial genome.


Subject(s)
DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Genome, Plant , Mitochondrial Dynamics , Tracheophyta/genetics , Base Sequence , Bryophyta/classification , Bryophyta/genetics , Chlorophyta/classification , Chlorophyta/genetics , Membrane Fusion , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Tracheophyta/classification
13.
BMC Biol ; 11: 29, 2013 Apr 15.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23587068

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The mitochondrial genomes of flowering plants vary greatly in size, gene content, gene order, mutation rate and level of RNA editing. However, the narrow phylogenetic breadth of available genomic data has limited our ability to reconstruct these traits in the ancestral flowering plant and, therefore, to infer subsequent patterns of evolution across angiosperms. RESULTS: We sequenced the mitochondrial genome of Liriodendron tulipifera, the first from outside the monocots or eudicots. This 553,721 bp mitochondrial genome has evolved remarkably slowly in virtually all respects, with an extraordinarily low genome-wide silent substitution rate, retention of genes frequently lost in other angiosperm lineages, and conservation of ancestral gene clusters. The mitochondrial protein genes in Liriodendron are the most heavily edited of any angiosperm characterized to date. Most of these sites are also edited in various other lineages, which allowed us to polarize losses of editing sites in other parts of the angiosperm phylogeny. Finally, we added comprehensive gene sequence data for two other magnoliids, Magnolia stellata and the more distantly related Calycanthus floridus, to measure rates of sequence evolution in Liriodendron with greater accuracy. The Magnolia genome has evolved at an even lower rate, revealing a roughly 5,000-fold range of synonymous-site divergence among angiosperms whose mitochondrial gene space has been comprehensively sequenced. CONCLUSIONS: Using Liriodendron as a guide, we estimate that the ancestral flowering plant mitochondrial genome contained 41 protein genes, 14 tRNA genes of mitochondrial origin, as many as 7 tRNA genes of chloroplast origin, >700 sites of RNA editing, and some 14 colinear gene clusters. Many of these gene clusters, genes and RNA editing sites have been variously lost in different lineages over the course of the ensuing ∽200 million years of angiosperm evolution.


Subject(s)
Fossils , Gene Order/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Liriodendron/genetics , Mutation Rate , RNA Editing/genetics , Base Pairing/genetics , DNA, Chloroplast/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genome Size/genetics , Multigene Family/genetics , Plastids/genetics , RNA, Transfer/genetics
14.
PLoS One ; 6(7): e21743, 2011.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21750729

ABSTRACT

Castor bean is an important oil-producing plant in the Euphorbiaceae family. Its high-quality oil contains up to 90% of the unusual fatty acid ricinoleate, which has many industrial and medical applications. Castor bean seeds also contain ricin, a highly toxic Type 2 ribosome-inactivating protein, which has gained relevance in recent years due to biosafety concerns. In order to gain knowledge on global genetic diversity in castor bean and to ultimately help the development of breeding and forensic tools, we carried out an extensive chloroplast sequence diversity analysis. Taking advantage of the recently published genome sequence of castor bean, we assembled the chloroplast and mitochondrion genomes extracting selected reads from the available whole genome shotgun reads. Using the chloroplast reference genome we used the methylation filtration technique to readily obtain draft genome sequences of 7 geographically and genetically diverse castor bean accessions. These sequence data were used to identify single nucleotide polymorphism markers and phylogenetic analysis resulted in the identification of two major clades that were not apparent in previous population genetic studies using genetic markers derived from nuclear DNA. Two distinct sub-clades could be defined within each major clade and large-scale genotyping of castor bean populations worldwide confirmed previously observed low levels of genetic diversity and showed a broad geographic distribution of each sub-clade.


Subject(s)
Genetic Variation , Genome, Chloroplast/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Ricinus communis/genetics , Base Sequence , Ricinus communis/classification , Ricinus communis/growth & development , DNA, Chloroplast/chemistry , DNA, Chloroplast/genetics , DNA, Circular/chemistry , DNA, Circular/genetics , DNA, Mitochondrial/chemistry , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Plant/chemistry , DNA, Plant/genetics , Genome, Plant/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Phylogeny , Polymorphism, Single Nucleotide , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Species Specificity
15.
Plant Cell ; 23(7): 2499-513, 2011 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21742987

ABSTRACT

Members of the flowering plant family Cucurbitaceae harbor the largest known mitochondrial genomes. Here, we report the 1685-kb mitochondrial genome of cucumber (Cucumis sativus). We help solve a 30-year mystery about the origins of its large size by showing that it mainly reflects the proliferation of dispersed repeats, expansions of existing introns, and the acquisition of sequences from diverse sources, including the cucumber nuclear and chloroplast genomes, viruses, and bacteria. The cucumber genome has a novel structure for plant mitochondria, mapping as three entirely or largely autonomous circular chromosomes (lengths 1556, 84, and 45 kb) that vary in relative abundance over a twofold range. These properties suggest that the three chromosomes replicate independently of one another. The two smaller chromosomes are devoid of known functional genes but nonetheless contain diagnostic mitochondrial features. Paired-end sequencing conflicts reveal differences in recombination dynamics among chromosomes, for which an explanatory model is developed, as well as a large pool of low-frequency genome conformations, many of which may result from asymmetric recombination across intermediate-sized and sometimes highly divergent repeats. These findings highlight the promise of genome sequencing for elucidating the recombinational dynamics of plant mitochondrial genomes.


Subject(s)
Chromosomes, Plant/genetics , Chromosomes, Plant/ultrastructure , Cucumis sativus/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial , Genome, Plant , Recombination, Genetic , Base Sequence , Chromosome Mapping , DNA, Mitochondrial/analysis , DNA, Mitochondrial/genetics , DNA, Plant/analysis , DNA, Plant/genetics , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Genes, Plant , Introns/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
16.
PLoS One ; 6(1): e16404, 2011 Jan 20.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21283772

ABSTRACT

The mitochondrial genomes of seed plants are exceptionally fluid in size, structure, and sequence content, with the accumulation and activity of repetitive sequences underlying much of this variation. We report the first fully sequenced mitochondrial genome of a legume, Vigna radiata (mung bean), and show that despite its unexceptional size (401,262 nt), the genome is unusually depauperate in repetitive DNA and "promiscuous" sequences from the chloroplast and nuclear genomes. Although Vigna lacks the large, recombinationally active repeats typical of most other seed plants, a PCR survey of its modest repertoire of short (38-297 nt) repeats nevertheless revealed evidence for recombination across all of them. A set of novel control assays showed, however, that these results could instead reflect, in part or entirely, artifacts of PCR-mediated recombination. Consequently, we recommend that other methods, especially high-depth genome sequencing, be used instead of PCR to infer patterns of plant mitochondrial recombination. The average-sized but repeat- and feature-poor mitochondrial genome of Vigna makes it ever more difficult to generalize about the factors shaping the size and sequence content of plant mitochondrial genomes.


Subject(s)
Fabaceae/genetics , Genome, Mitochondrial/genetics , Recombination, Genetic , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid , Base Sequence , Genome, Plant , Polymerase Chain Reaction , Sequence Analysis, DNA
17.
Genome Res ; 20(12): 1700-10, 2010 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20978141

ABSTRACT

Point mutations result from errors made during DNA replication or repair, so they are usually expected to be homogeneous across all regions of a genome. However, we have found a region of chloroplast DNA in plants related to sweetpea (Lathyrus) whose local point mutation rate is at least 20 times higher than elsewhere in the same molecule. There are very few precedents for such heterogeneity in any genome, and we suspect that the hypermutable region may be subject to an unusual process such as repeated DNA breakage and repair. The region is 1.5 kb long and coincides with a gene, ycf4, whose rate of evolution has increased dramatically. The product of ycf4, a photosystem I assembly protein, is more divergent within the single genus Lathyrus than between cyanobacteria and other angiosperms. Moreover, ycf4 has been lost from the chloroplast genome in Lathyrus odoratus and separately in three other groups of legumes. Each of the four consecutive genes ycf4-psaI-accD-rps16 has been lost in at least one member of the legume "inverted repeat loss" clade, despite the rarity of chloroplast gene losses in angiosperms. We established that accD has relocated to the nucleus in Trifolium species, but were unable to find nuclear copies of ycf4 or psaI in Lathyrus. Our results suggest that, as well as accelerating sequence evolution, localized hypermutation has contributed to the phenomenon of gene loss or relocation to the nucleus.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Genes, Plant/genetics , Genetic Variation , Genome, Chloroplast/genetics , Lathyrus/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Photosystem I Protein Complex/genetics , Amino Acid Sequence , Base Sequence , DNA Primers/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, DNA
18.
Mol Biol Evol ; 27(6): 1436-48, 2010 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20118192

ABSTRACT

The mitochondrial genomes of seed plants are unusually large and vary in size by at least an order of magnitude. Much of this variation occurs within a single family, the Cucurbitaceae, whose genomes range from an estimated 390 to 2,900 kb in size. We sequenced the mitochondrial genomes of Citrullus lanatus (watermelon: 379,236 nt) and Cucurbita pepo (zucchini: 982,833 nt)--the two smallest characterized cucurbit mitochondrial genomes--and determined their RNA editing content. The relatively compact Citrullus mitochondrial genome actually contains more and longer genes and introns, longer segmental duplications, and more discernibly nuclear-derived DNA. The large size of the Cucurbita mitochondrial genome reflects the accumulation of unprecedented amounts of both chloroplast sequences (>113 kb) and short repeated sequences (>370 kb). A low mutation rate has been hypothesized to underlie increases in both genome size and RNA editing frequency in plant mitochondria. However, despite its much larger genome, Cucurbita has a significantly higher synonymous substitution rate (and presumably mutation rate) than Citrullus but comparable levels of RNA editing. The evolution of mutation rate, genome size, and RNA editing are apparently decoupled in Cucurbitaceae, reflecting either simple stochastic variation or governance by different factors.


Subject(s)
Citrullus/genetics , Cucurbita/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Genome, Mitochondrial , Genome, Plant , Introns , Models, Genetic , Mutation , RNA Editing , RNA, Transfer , Repetitive Sequences, Nucleic Acid
19.
Nature ; 452(7190): 991-6, 2008 Apr 24.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18432245

ABSTRACT

Papaya, a fruit crop cultivated in tropical and subtropical regions, is known for its nutritional benefits and medicinal applications. Here we report a 3x draft genome sequence of 'SunUp' papaya, the first commercial virus-resistant transgenic fruit tree to be sequenced. The papaya genome is three times the size of the Arabidopsis genome, but contains fewer genes, including significantly fewer disease-resistance gene analogues. Comparison of the five sequenced genomes suggests a minimal angiosperm gene set of 13,311. A lack of recent genome duplication, atypical of other angiosperm genomes sequenced so far, may account for the smaller papaya gene number in most functional groups. Nonetheless, striking amplifications in gene number within particular functional groups suggest roles in the evolution of tree-like habit, deposition and remobilization of starch reserves, attraction of seed dispersal agents, and adaptation to tropical daylengths. Transgenesis at three locations is closely associated with chloroplast insertions into the nuclear genome, and with topoisomerase I recognition sites. Papaya offers numerous advantages as a system for fruit-tree functional genomics, and this draft genome sequence provides the foundation for revealing the basis of Carica's distinguishing morpho-physiological, medicinal and nutritional properties.


Subject(s)
Carica/genetics , Genome, Plant/genetics , Arabidopsis/genetics , Contig Mapping , Databases, Genetic , Genes, Plant/genetics , Molecular Sequence Data , Plants, Genetically Modified/genetics , Sequence Alignment , Sequence Analysis, DNA , Transcription Factors/genetics , Tropical Climate
20.
BMC Biol ; 4: 31, 2006 Sep 06.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16956407

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) to the plant mitochondrial genome has recently been shown to occur at a surprisingly high rate; however, little evidence has been found for HGT to the plastid genome, despite extensive sequencing. In this study, we analyzed all genes from sequenced plastid genomes to unearth any neglected cases of HGT and to obtain a measure of the overall extent of HGT to the plastid. RESULTS: Although several genes gave strongly supported conflicting trees under certain conditions, we are confident of HGT in only a single case beyond the rubisco HGT already reported. Most of the conflicts involved near neighbors connected by long branches (e.g. red algae and their secondary hosts), where phylogenetic methods are prone to mislead. However, three genes--clpP, ycf2, and rpl36--provided strong support for taxa moving far from their organismal position. Further taxon sampling of clpP and ycf2 resulted in rejection of HGT due to long-branch attraction and a serious error in the published plastid genome sequence of Oenothera elata, respectively. A single new case, a bacterial rpl36 gene transferred into the ancestor of the cryptophyte and haptophyte plastids, appears to be a true HGT event. Interestingly, this rpl36 gene is a distantly related paralog of the rpl36 type found in other plastids and most eubacteria. Moreover, the transferred gene has physically replaced the native rpl36 gene, yet flanking genes and intergenic regions show no sign of HGT. This suggests that gene replacement somehow occurred by recombination at the very ends of rpl36, without the level and length of similarity normally expected to support recombination. CONCLUSION: The rpl36 HGT discovered in this study is of considerable interest in terms of both molecular mechanism and phylogeny. The plastid acquisition of a bacterial rpl36 gene via HGT provides the first strong evidence for a sister-group relationship between haptophyte and cryptophyte plastids to the exclusion of heterokont and alveolate plastids. Moreover, the bacterial gene has replaced the native plastid rpl36 gene by an uncertain mechanism that appears inconsistent with existing models for the recombinational basis of gene conversion.


Subject(s)
Bacteria/genetics , Gene Transfer, Horizontal , Genes, Plant , Plants/genetics , Plastids/genetics , Oenothera/genetics , Rhodophyta/genetics , Symbiosis
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