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Revisiting chloroplast genomic landscape and annotation towards comparative chloroplast genomes of Rhamnaceae
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Metadata
Document Title
Revisiting chloroplast genomic landscape and annotation towards comparative chloroplast genomes of Rhamnaceae
Author
Wanichthanarak K. Nookaew I. Pasookhush P. Wongsurawat T. Jenjaroenpun P. Leeratsuwan N. Wattanachaisaereekul S. Visessanguan W. Sirivatanauksorn Y. Nuntasaen N. Kuhakarn C. Reutrakul V. Ajawatanawong P. Khoomrung S.
Affiliations
Metabolomics and Systems Biology Department of Biochemistry Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital Mahidol University Bangkok 10700 Thailand; Siriraj Metabolomics and Phenomics Center Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital Mahidol University Bangkok 10700 Thailand; Department of Biomedical Informatics College of Medicine University of Arkansas for Medical Sciences Little Rock AR 72205 United States; Division of Bioinformatics and Data Management for Research Faculty of Medicine Siriraj Hospital Mahidol University Bangkok 10700 Thailand; Department of Biology Faculty of Science Mahidol University Bangkok 10400 Thailand; School of Food industry King Mongkut抯 Institute of Technology Ladkrabang Bangkok 10520 Thailand; Functional Ingredients and Food Biotechnology Research Unit National Center for Genetic Engineering and Biotechnology (BIOTEC) Phathumthani 12120 Thailand; Department of Chemistry and Center of Excellence for Innovation in Chemistry (PERCH-CIC) Faculty of Science Mahidol University Bangkok 10400 Thailand; Department of National Parks Wildlife and Plant Conservation Ministry of Natural Resources and Environment Bangkok 10900 Thailand
Type
Article
Source Title
BMC Plant Biology
ISSN
14712229
Year
2023
Volume
23
Issue
1
Open Access
All Open Access Gold Green
Publisher
BioMed Central Ltd
DOI
10.1186/s12870-023-04074-5
Abstract
Background: Massive parallel sequencing technologies have enabled the elucidation of plant phylogenetic relationships from chloroplast genomes at a high pace. These include members of the family Rhamnaceae. The current Rhamnaceae phylogenetic tree is from 13 out of 24 Rhamnaceae chloroplast genomes and only one chloroplast genome of the genus Ventilago is available. Hence the phylogenetic relationships in Rhamnaceae remain incomplete and more representative species are needed. Results: The complete chloroplast genome of Ventilago harmandiana Pierre was outlined using a hybrid assembly of long- and short-read technologies. The accuracy and validity of the final genome were confirmed with PCR amplifications and investigation of coverage depth. Sanger sequencing was used to correct for differences in lengths and nucleotide bases between inverted repeats because of the homopolymers. The phylogenetic trees reconstructed using prevalent methods for phylogenetic inference were topologically similar. The clustering based on codon usage was congruent with the molecular phylogenetic tree. The groups of genera in each tribe were in accordance with tribal classification based on molecular markers. We resolved the phylogenetic relationships among six Hovenia species three Rhamnus species and two Ventilago species. Our reconstructed tree provides the most complete and reliable low-level taxonomy to date for the family Rhamnaceae. Similar to other higher plants the RNA editing mostly resulted in converting serine to leucine. Besides most genes were subjected to purifying selection. Annotation anomalies including indel calling errors unaligned open reading frames of the same gene inconsistent prediction of intergenic regions and misannotated genes were identified in the published chloroplast genomes used in this study. These could be a result of the usual imperfections in computational tools and/or existing errors in reference genomes. Importantly these are points of concern with regards to utilizing published chloroplast genomes for comparative genomic analysis. Conclusions: In summary we successfully demonstrated the use of comprehensive genomic data including DNA and amino acid sequences to build a reliable and high-resolution phylogenetic tree for the family Rhamnaceae. Additionally our study indicates that the revision of genome annotation before comparative genomic analyses is necessary to prevent the propagation of errors and complications in downstream analysis and interpretation. ? 2023 The Author(s).
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License
CC BY
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Publication Source
WOS