TY - JOUR
T1 - The evolution of the plastid chromosome in land plants
T2 - Gene content, gene order, gene function
AU - Wicke, Susann
AU - Schneeweiss, Gerald M.
AU - dePamphilis, Claude W.
AU - Müller, Kai F.
AU - Quandt, Dietmar
N1 - Funding Information:
Acknowledgments Thanks are especially due to Monika Ballmann (Bonn) and Ortrun Lepping (Münster) for assistance in retrieving genome annotations from public databases. We are very grateful to Norman Wickett (PSU), Paul Wolf (USU), Yan Zhang (PSU) and Josh Der (PSU) for fruitful and inspiring discussions on plastid genome evolution in land plants. We thank Laura Forrest and Bernard Goffinet (UConn) as well as Bastian Schäferhoff (IEB, Muenster) for sharing unpublished data with us. We appreciate helpful suggestions on an earlier version of this manuscript by two anonymous reviewers. Funding of our own research on parasitic plants and carnivores was obtained from the Austrian Science Fund (FWF grant 19404 to G.M.S), DFG grant MU2875/2, to K.F.M), and N.S.F. grants DEB-0120709 and DBI-0701748 to C.W.D.). Financial support to S.W. from the University of Vienna (Austria) and the Botanical Society of America is gratefully acknowledged.
PY - 2011/7
Y1 - 2011/7
N2 - This review bridges functional and evolutionary aspects of plastid chromosome architecture in land plants and their putative ancestors. We provide an overview on the structure and composition of the plastid genome of land plants as well as the functions of its genes in an explicit phylogenetic and evolutionary context. We will discuss the architecture of land plant plastid chromosomes, including gene content and synteny across land plants. Moreover, we will explore the functions and roles of plastid encoded genes in metabolism and their evolutionary importance regarding gene retention and conservation. We suggest that the slow mode at which the plastome typically evolves is likely to be influenced by a combination of different molecular mechanisms. These include the organization of plastid genes in operons, the usually uniparental mode of plastid inheritance, the activity of highly effective repair mechanisms as well as the rarity of plastid fusion. Nevertheless, structurally rearranged plastomes can be found in several unrelated lineages (e. g. ferns, Pinaceae, multiple angiosperm families). Rearrangements and gene losses seem to correlate with an unusual mode of plastid transmission, abundance of repeats, or a heterotrophic lifestyle (parasites or myco-heterotrophs). While only a few functional gene gains and more frequent gene losses have been inferred for land plants, the plastid Ndh complex is one example of multiple independent gene losses and will be discussed in detail. Patterns of ndh-gene loss and functional analyses indicate that these losses are usually found in plant groups with a certain degree of heterotrophy, might rendering plastid encoded Ndh1 subunits dispensable.
AB - This review bridges functional and evolutionary aspects of plastid chromosome architecture in land plants and their putative ancestors. We provide an overview on the structure and composition of the plastid genome of land plants as well as the functions of its genes in an explicit phylogenetic and evolutionary context. We will discuss the architecture of land plant plastid chromosomes, including gene content and synteny across land plants. Moreover, we will explore the functions and roles of plastid encoded genes in metabolism and their evolutionary importance regarding gene retention and conservation. We suggest that the slow mode at which the plastome typically evolves is likely to be influenced by a combination of different molecular mechanisms. These include the organization of plastid genes in operons, the usually uniparental mode of plastid inheritance, the activity of highly effective repair mechanisms as well as the rarity of plastid fusion. Nevertheless, structurally rearranged plastomes can be found in several unrelated lineages (e. g. ferns, Pinaceae, multiple angiosperm families). Rearrangements and gene losses seem to correlate with an unusual mode of plastid transmission, abundance of repeats, or a heterotrophic lifestyle (parasites or myco-heterotrophs). While only a few functional gene gains and more frequent gene losses have been inferred for land plants, the plastid Ndh complex is one example of multiple independent gene losses and will be discussed in detail. Patterns of ndh-gene loss and functional analyses indicate that these losses are usually found in plant groups with a certain degree of heterotrophy, might rendering plastid encoded Ndh1 subunits dispensable.
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U2 - 10.1007/s11103-011-9762-4
DO - 10.1007/s11103-011-9762-4
M3 - Review article
C2 - 21424877
AN - SCOPUS:79957927000
SN - 0167-4412
VL - 76
SP - 273
EP - 297
JO - Plant molecular biology
JF - Plant molecular biology
IS - 3-5
ER -