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      Enlarged and highly repetitive plastome ofLagarostrobosand plastid phylogenomics of Podocarpaceae

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      bioRxiv

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          Abstract

          Podocarpaceae is the largest family in cupressophytes (conifers II), but their plastid genomes (plastomes) are poorly studied, with plastome data currently existing for only four of the 19 Podocarpaceous genera. In this study, we assembled the plastomes from representatives of eight additional genera, including Afrocarpus, Dacrydium, Lagarostrobos, Lepidothamnus, Microstrobos, Phyllocladus, Prumnopitys, and Saxegothaea. We found that Lagarostrobos, a monotypic genus native to Tasmania, has the largest plastome among any cupressophytes studied to date (151,496 bp). Plastome enlargement in Lagarostroboscoincides with increased intergenic spacers, repeats, and duplicated genes. Among Podocarpaceae, Lagarostroboshas the most rearranged plastome, but its substitution rates are modest. Plastid phylogenomic analyses clarify the positions of previously conflicting Podocarpaceous genera. Tree topologies firmly support the division of Podocarpaceae into two sister clades: (1) the Prumnopityoid clade and (2) the clade containing Podocarpoid, Dacrydioid, Microstrobos, and Saxegothaea. The Phyllocladusis nested within the Podocarpaceae, thus familial status of the monotypic Phyllocladaceae is not supported.

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          Author and article information

          Journal
          bioRxiv
          August 16 2018
          Article
          10.1101/392357
          ddfa986e-3d05-41c3-8ef0-f03e02ecbf1b
          © 2018
          History

          Evolutionary Biology,Forensic science
          Evolutionary Biology, Forensic science

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