Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.

Chimeric genes are significant sources of evolutionary innovation that are normally created when portions of two or more protein coding regions fuse to form a new open reading frame. In plant mitochondria astonishingly high numbers of different novel chimeric genes have been reported, where they are...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Helena Storchova, Karel Müller, Steffen Lau, Matthew S Olson
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2012-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3288002?pdf=render
id doaj-1786b079087f4f68b905c0f55a92890d
record_format Article
spelling doaj-1786b079087f4f68b905c0f55a92890d2020-11-25T01:19:26ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032012-01-0172e3040110.1371/journal.pone.0030401Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.Helena StorchovaKarel MüllerSteffen LauMatthew S OlsonChimeric genes are significant sources of evolutionary innovation that are normally created when portions of two or more protein coding regions fuse to form a new open reading frame. In plant mitochondria astonishingly high numbers of different novel chimeric genes have been reported, where they are generated through processes of rearrangement and recombination. Nonetheless, because most studies do not find or report nucleotide variation within the same chimeric gene, evolution after the origination of these chimeric genes remains unstudied. Here we identify two alleles of a complex chimera in Silene vulgaris that are divergent in nucleotide sequence, genomic position relative to other mitochondrial genes, and expression patterns. Structural patterns suggest a history partially influenced by gene conversion between the chimeric gene and functional copies of subunit 1 of the mitochondrial ATP synthase gene (atp1). We identified small repeat structures within the chimeras that are likely recombination sites allowing generation of the chimera. These results establish the potential for chimeric gene divergence in different plant mitochondrial lineages within the same species. This result contrasts with the absence of diversity within mitochondrial chimeras found in crop species.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3288002?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Helena Storchova
Karel Müller
Steffen Lau
Matthew S Olson
spellingShingle Helena Storchova
Karel Müller
Steffen Lau
Matthew S Olson
Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Helena Storchova
Karel Müller
Steffen Lau
Matthew S Olson
author_sort Helena Storchova
title Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.
title_short Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.
title_full Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.
title_fullStr Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.
title_full_unstemmed Mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in Silene vulgaris.
title_sort mosaic origins of a complex chimeric mitochondrial gene in silene vulgaris.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Chimeric genes are significant sources of evolutionary innovation that are normally created when portions of two or more protein coding regions fuse to form a new open reading frame. In plant mitochondria astonishingly high numbers of different novel chimeric genes have been reported, where they are generated through processes of rearrangement and recombination. Nonetheless, because most studies do not find or report nucleotide variation within the same chimeric gene, evolution after the origination of these chimeric genes remains unstudied. Here we identify two alleles of a complex chimera in Silene vulgaris that are divergent in nucleotide sequence, genomic position relative to other mitochondrial genes, and expression patterns. Structural patterns suggest a history partially influenced by gene conversion between the chimeric gene and functional copies of subunit 1 of the mitochondrial ATP synthase gene (atp1). We identified small repeat structures within the chimeras that are likely recombination sites allowing generation of the chimera. These results establish the potential for chimeric gene divergence in different plant mitochondrial lineages within the same species. This result contrasts with the absence of diversity within mitochondrial chimeras found in crop species.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3288002?pdf=render
work_keys_str_mv AT helenastorchova mosaicoriginsofacomplexchimericmitochondrialgeneinsilenevulgaris
AT karelmuller mosaicoriginsofacomplexchimericmitochondrialgeneinsilenevulgaris
AT steffenlau mosaicoriginsofacomplexchimericmitochondrialgeneinsilenevulgaris
AT matthewsolson mosaicoriginsofacomplexchimericmitochondrialgeneinsilenevulgaris
_version_ 1725138321809604608