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Article Abstract

is a large family with more than 1,600 species, belonging to 75 genera. The largest genus--is vast, comprising about a thousand species. species (as well as other members of the ) are widespread and diversified, they are adapted to a wide range of habitats from shady forests to open habitats like meadows, steppes, and deserts. The genes present in chloroplast genomes (plastomes) play fundamental roles for the photosynthetic plants. Plastome traits could thus be associated with geophysical abiotic characteristics of habitats. Most chloroplast genes are highly conserved and are used as phylogenetic markers for many families of vascular plants. Nevertheless, some studies revealed signatures of positive selection in chloroplast genes of many plant families including . We have sequenced plastomes of the following nine (tribe of ) species: , , , , , , , , , , , and (tribe of ). We compared our data with previously published plastomes and provided our interpretation of plastome genes' annotations because we found some noteworthy inconsistencies with annotations previously reported. For species we estimated the integral evolutionary rate, counted SNPs and indels per nucleotide position as well as compared pseudogenization events in species of three main phylogenetic lines of genus to estimate whether they are potentially important for plant physiology or just follow the phylogenetic pattern. During examination of the 38 species of and the 11 of other species we found that , , , genes have lost their functionality multiple times in different species (regularly evolutionary events), while the pseudogenization of other genes was stochastic events. We found that the "normal" or "pseudo" state of , , , genes correlates well with the evolutionary line of genus the species belongs to. The positive selection in various NADH dehydrogenase () genes as well as in , , and some others were found. Taking into account known mechanisms of coping with excessive light by cyclic electron transport, we can hypothesize that adaptive evolution in genes, coding subunits of NADH-plastoquinone oxidoreductase could be driven by abiotic factors of alpine habitats, especially by intensive light and UV radiation.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8296844PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fgene.2021.674783DOI Listing

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