遗传 ›› 2008, Vol. 30 ›› Issue (11): 1506-1512.doi: 10.3724/SP.J.1005.2008.01506

• 研究报告 • 上一篇    下一篇

茄科植物叶绿体基因组插入、缺失和核苷酸替代的发生方式及影响

唐萍;王强;陈建群   

  1. 南京大学生命科学学院生物系, 南京 210093
  • 收稿日期:2008-04-03 修回日期:2008-07-14 出版日期:2008-11-10 发布日期:2008-11-10
  • 通讯作者: 陈建群

The patterns and influences of insertions, deletionsand nucleotide substitutions in Solanaceae chloroplast genome

TANG Ping;WANG Qiang;CHEN Jian-Qun   

  1. Biological Department, College of Life Science, Nanjing University, Nanjing 210093, China
  • Received:2008-04-03 Revised:2008-07-14 Online:2008-11-10 Published:2008-11-10
  • Contact: CHEN Jian-Qun

摘要: 摘要: 核苷酸替代和indels(插入、缺失统称)发生是进化的重要动力。以茄科植物为研究对象, 探讨茄属中番茄和马铃薯、烟草属中绒毛状烟草和普通烟草分化时叶绿体基因组indels和核苷酸替代的发生方式, 以及这两种突变对基因组造成的影响。结果显示: indels和核苷酸替代的发生都不是随意的。indels发生在A+T丰富的区域, 1 bp indels占据总数的30%以上, 大部分indels都为低于10 bp的较短片段。核苷酸替代表现出Ts(转换)/Tv(颠换)偏差, 但T→G, A→C颠换频率却明显增加。Ts/Tv比值出现种属特异性, 番茄和马铃薯比较时替代的Ts/Tv比值低于绒毛状烟草和普通烟草比较时Ts/Tv比值。不同物种替代的(A+T)/(G+C)比值有一定差异, 从而影响基因组的(G+C)%, 此比值的差异与形成物种的生长习性有一定的关系。

关键词: 缺失, 核苷酸替代, 插入, 叶绿体, 茄科植物

Abstract: Abstract: Nucleotide substitution and indels (insertions and deletions) events are the major evolutionary driving forces. Comparisons of the indels and nucleotide substitution patterns were made in the chloroplast genomes between Solanum lycopersicum L. and Solanum bulbocastanum L., Nicotiana tomentosiformis L. and Nicotiana tabacum L. in Solanaceae. The influence of mutation on genome composition was analyzed. The indels and substitutions were not randomly distrib-uted throughout the chloroplast genomes. The indels were in AT-rich regions. One base pair indels accounted for above 30% of the total indels. Most of the indels were short of 10 bp. The nucleotide substitutions showed Ts/Tv bias, but transversion frequency of T→G and A→C was increased significantly. Ts/Tv rates were lineage-specific. The Ts/Tv rate between S. ly-copersicum and S. bulbocastanum was lower than that between N. tomentosiformis and N. tabacum. (A+T)/(G+C) rates varied in different lineages, which had an influence on (G+C)% of genomes. The changes in the (A+T)/(G+C) rates might correlate with the life histories of different species.