Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
2834112 Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 2012 17 Pages PDF
Abstract

The phylogeny of 58 Pelargonium species was estimated using five plastid markers (rbcL, matK, ndhF, rpoC1, trnL-F) and one mitochondrial gene (nad5). The results confirmed the monophyly of three major clades and four subclades within Pelargonium but also indicate the need to revise some sectional classifications. This phylogeny was used to examine karyotype evolution in the genus: plotting chromosome sizes, numbers and 2C-values indicates that genome size is significantly correlated with chromosome size but not number. Accelerated rates of nucleotide substitution have been previously detected in both plastid and mitochondrial genes in Pelargonium, but sparse taxon sampling did not enable identification of the phylogenetic distribution of these elevated rates. Using the multigene phylogeny as a constraint, we investigated lineage- and locus-specific heterogeneity of substitution rates in Pelargonium for an expanded number of taxa and demonstrated that both plastid and mitochondrial genes have had accelerated substitution rates but with markedly disparate patterns. In the plastid, the exons of rpoC1 have significantly accelerated substitution rates compared to its intron and the acceleration was mainly due to nonsynonymous substitutions. In contrast, the mitochondrial gene, nad5, experienced substantial acceleration of synonymous substitution rates in three internal branches of Pelargonium, but this acceleration ceased in all terminal branches. Several lineages also have dN/dS ratios significantly greater than one for rpoC1, indicating that positive selection is acting on this gene, whereas the accelerated synonymous substitutions in the mitochondrial gene are the result of elevated mutation rates.

Graphical abstractFigure optionsDownload full-size imageDownload as PowerPoint slideHighlights► Phylogenetic analyses using six plastid and mitochondrial markers resolved three major and four minor clades in Pelargonium. ► Genome sizes are correlated with chromosome size rather than chromosome number. ► A specific plastid gene, rpoC1, shows accelerated nonsynonymous substitution rates. ► The exon of rpoC1 has higher nucleotide substitution rates than its intron. ► A mitochondrial gene, nad5, has extremely elevated synonymous substitution rates.

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