Plastomes Provide Insights into Differences between Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny: Ostericum and Angelica (Apiaceae) as an Example

Keywords
Angelica, Ostericum, comparisons, morphological, phylogenetic, plastomes
Title
Plastomes Provide Insights into Differences between Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny: Ostericum and Angelica (Apiaceae) as an Example
Publication Type
Journal Article
Series Name
Diversity
Volume
14
Publication Year
2022
Issue
9
Page Numbers
776
DOI
10.3390/d14090776
Publication Date
2022 Sep 19
Unique Local Identifier

Qiu-Ping Jiang, Chang-Kun Liu, Deng-Feng Xie, Song-Dong Zhou, and Xing-Jin He. Plastomes Provide Insights into Differences between Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny: Ostericum and Angelica (Apiaceae) as an Example . Diversity. 2022 Sep 19; 14(9):776.

Citation
Qiu-Ping Jiang, Chang-Kun Liu, Deng-Feng Xie, Song-Dong Zhou, and Xing-Jin He. Plastomes Provide Insights into Differences between Morphology and Molecular Phylogeny: Ostericum and Angelica (Apiaceae) as an Example . Diversity. 2022 Sep 19; 14(9):776.
Authors
Qiu-Ping Jiang, Chang-Kun Liu, Deng-Feng Xie, Song-Dong Zhou, and Xing-Jin He
Abstract
Traditional classification based on morphological characters suggests that the genus Ostericum is closely related to Angelica, but molecular phylogenetic studies suggest that the genus Ostericum is related to Pternopetalum rather than Angelica. In this study, the plastomes of nine Ostericum species and five Angelica species were used to conduct bioinformatic and comparative analyses. The plastomes of Ostericum and Angelica exhibited significant differences in genome size, gene numbers, IR junctions, nucleotide diversity, divergent regions, and the repeat units of SSR types. In contrast, Ostericum is more similar to Pternopetalum rather than Angelica in comparative genomics analyses. In total, 80 protein-coding genes from 97 complete plastomes and 112 ITS sequences were used to reconstruct phylogenetic trees. Phylogenies showed that Angelica was mainly located in Selineae tribe while Ostericum was a sister to Pternopetalum and occurred in the Acronema clade. However, morphological analysis was inconsistent with molecular phylogenetic analysis: Angelica and Ostericum have similar fruit morphological characteristics while the fruits of Ostericum are quite different from the genus Pternopetalum. The phylogenetic relationship between Angelica and Ostericum is consistent with the results of plastome comparisons but discordant with morphological characters. The cause of this phenomenon may be convergent morphology and incomplete lineage sorting (ILS).
Is Obsolete
False