De novo assembly of the complete mitochondrial genome of sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas [L.] Lam) revealed the existence of homologous conformations generated by the repeat-mediated recombination

Zhijian Yang(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Yang Ni(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Zebin Lin(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Liubin Yang(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Guotai Chen(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Nuerla Nijiati(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Yunzhuo Hu(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University), Xuanyang Chen(Fujian Agriculture and Forestry University)
BMC Plant Biology
June 10, 2022
Cited by 93Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

Sweet potato (Ipomoea batatas [L.] Lam) is an important food crop, an excellent fodder crop, and a new type of industrial raw material crop. The lack of genomic resources could affect the process of industrialization of sweet potato. Few detailed reports have been completed on the mitochondrial genome of sweet potato. In this research, we sequenced and assembled the mitochondrial genome of sweet potato and investigated its substructure. The mitochondrial genome of sweet potato is 270,304 bp with 23 unique core genes and 12 variable genes. We detected 279 pairs of repeat sequences and found that three pairs of direct repeats could mediate the homologous recombination into four independent circular molecules. We identified 70 SSRs in the whole mitochondrial genome of sweet potato. The longest dispersed repeat in mitochondrial genome was a palindromic repeat with a length of 915 bp. The homologous fragments between the chloroplast and mitochondrial genome account for 7.35% of the mitochondrial genome. We also predicted 597 RNA editing sites and found that the rps3 gene was edited 54 times, which occurred most frequently. This study further demonstrates the existence of multiple conformations in sweet potato mitochondrial genomes and provides a theoretical basis for the evolution of higher plants and cytoplasmic male sterility breeding.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis