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As one of the largest genera of Lamiaceae and of great medicinal importance, is also phylogenetically and taxonomically recalcitrant largely ascribed to its recent rapid radiation in the Hengduan Mountains. Previous molecular phylogenetic studies using limited loci have only successfully resolved the backbone topology of the genus, but the interspecific relationships suffered from low resolution, especially within the largest clade (Clade IV) which comprises over 80% species. In this study, we attempted to further elucidate the phylogenetic relationships within especially Clade IV using plastome sequences with a broad taxon sampling of ca. 80% species of the genus. To reduce systematic errors, twelve different plastome data sets (coding and non-coding regions with ambiguously aligned regions and saturated loci removed or not) were employed to reconstruct phylogeny using maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference. Our results revealed largely congruent topologies of the 12 data sets and recovered major lineages of consistent with previous studies, but several incongruences are also found among these data sets and among single plastid loci. Most of the shallow nodes within Clade IV were resolved with high support but extremely short branch lengths in plastid trees, and showed tremendous conflicts with the nrDNA tree, morphology and geographic distribution. These incongruences may largely result from stochasticity (due to insufficient phylogenetic signal) and hybridization and plastid capture. Therefore, the uniparental-inherited plastome sequences are insufficient to disentangle relationships within a genus which has undergone recent rapid diversification. Our findings highlight a need for additional data from nuclear genome to resolve the relationships within Clade IV and more focused studies to assess the influences of multiple processes in the evolutionary history of . Nevertheless, the morphology of the shape and surface sculpture/indumentum of nutlets is of systematic importance that they can distinguish the four major clades of .
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http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.985488 | DOI Listing |
Nat Plants
September 2025
Plant Science Division, Research School of Biology, The Australian National University, Canberra, Australian Capital Territory, Australia.
A new Escherichia coli laboratory evolution screen for detecting plant ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (Rubisco) mutations with enhanced CO-fixation capacity has identified substitutions that can enhance plant productivity. Selected were a large subunit catalytic (Met-116-Leu) mutation that increases the k of varying plant Rubiscos by 25% to 40% and a solubility (Ala-242-Val) mutation that improves plant Rubisco biogenesis in E. coli 2- to 10-fold.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAm J Bot
September 2025
Co-Innovation Center for Sustainable Forestry in Southern China, State Key Laboratory of Tree Genetics and Breeding, College of Life Sciences, Nanjing Forestry University, Nanjing, 210037, China.
Premise: Floristic exchanges between Oceania and tropical Asia have significant asymmetrical characteristics. Many groups of plants have dispersed southward from Asia to Oceania, whereas a northward dispersal from Oceania to tropical Asia (i.e.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Phylogenet Evol
September 2025
School of Ecology and Environmental Science, Yunnan Key Laboratory of Plant Reproductive Adaptation and Evolutionary Ecology and Institute of Biodiversity, School of Life Sciences, Yunnan University, Kunming 650504 Yunnan, China. Electronic address:
The advent of high-throughput genomic sequencing has provided unprecedented access to genome-scale data. This deluge of data has yielded new insights into phylogenetic relationships across the tree of life. However, incongruent results arising from different data partitions or from the use of different analyses have often been overlooked or insufficiently explored.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlant J
September 2025
Institute of Molecular Biology, University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon, 97403, USA.
Translation of the chloroplast psbA mRNA in angiosperms is activated by photodamage of its gene product, the D1 subunit of photosystem II (PSII), providing nascent D1 for PSII repair. The involvement of chlorophyll in the regulatory mechanism has been suggested due to the regulatory roles of proteins proposed to mediate chlorophyll/D1 transactions and the fact that chlorophyll is synthesized only in the light in angiosperms. We used ribosome profiling and RNA-seq to address whether the effects of light on chloroplast translation are conserved in the liverwort Marchantia (Marchantia polymorpha), which synthesizes chlorophyll in both the dark and the light.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS One
September 2025
Museum of Natural History and Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Colorado, Boulder, Colorado, United States of America.
Diatoms are pivotal in global oxygen, carbon dioxide, and silica cycling, contributing significantly to photosynthesis and serving as fundamental components in aquatic ecosystems. Recent advancements in genomic sequencing have shed light on their evolutionary dynamics, revealing evolutionary complex genomes influenced by symbiotic relationships and horizontal gene transfer events. By analyzing publicly available sequences for 120 plastomes and 70 mitogenomes, this paper aims to elucidate the evolutionary dynamics of diatoms across diverse lineages.
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