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The complete chloroplast genome of tall fescue ( Lolium arundinaceum ; Poaceae) and comparison of whole plastomes from the family Poaceae
Author(s) -
Cahoon A. Bruce,
Sharpe Richard M.,
Mysayphonh Chansamone,
Thompson Elizabeth J.,
Ward Andrea D.,
Lin Anhua
Publication year - 2010
Publication title -
american journal of botany
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.218
H-Index - 151
eISSN - 1537-2197
pISSN - 0002-9122
DOI - 10.3732/ajb.0900008
Subject(s) - biology , chloroplast dna , phylogenetic tree , poaceae , intergenic region , genome , lolium , genetics , phylogenetics , botany , evolutionary biology , gene
In this paper, we describe the complete chloroplast genome of Lolium arundinaceum . This sequence is the culmination of a long‐term project completed by >400 undergraduates who took general genetics at Middle Tennessee State University from 2004–2007. It was undertaken in an attempt to introduce these students to an open‐ended experiential/exploratory lesson to produce and analyze novel data. The data they produced should provide the necessary information for both phylogenetic comparisons and plastome engineering of tall fescue. The fescue plastome (GenBank FJ466687 ) is 136048 bp with a typical quadripartite structure and a gene order similar to other grasses; 56% of the plastome is coding region comprised of 75 protein‐coding genes, 29 tRNAs, four rRNAs, and one hypothetical coding region ( ycf ). Comparisons of Poaceae plastomes reveal size differences between the PACC (subfamilies Panicoideae, Arundinoideae, Centothecoideae, and Chloridoideae) and BOP (subfamilies Bambusoideae, Oryzoideae, and Pooideae) clades. Alignment analysis suggests that several potentially conserved large deletions in previously identified intergenic length polymorphic regions are responsible for the majority of the size discrepancy. Phylogenetic analysis using whole plastome data suggests that fescue closely aligns with Lolium perenne . Some unique features as well as phylogenetic branch length calculations, however, suggest that a number of changes have occurred since these species diverged.

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