Miniaturized mitogenome of the parasitic plant Viscum scurruloideum is extremely divergent and dynamic and has lost all nad genes
Indiana University Bloomington · Western Michigan University
Abstract
Despite the enormous diversity among parasitic angiosperms in form and structure, life-history strategies, and plastid genomes, little is known about the diversity of their mitogenomes. We report the sequence of the wonderfully bizarre mitogenome of the hemiparasitic aerial mistletoe Viscum scurruloideum. This genome is only 66 kb in size, making it the smallest known angiosperm mitogenome by a factor of more than three and the smallest land plant mitogenome. Accompanying this size reduction is exceptional reduction of gene content. Much of this reduction arises from the unexpected loss of respiratory complex I (NADH dehydrogenase), universally present in all 300+ other angiosperms examined, where it is…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 29.39
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 81
Authors
4Topics & keywords
- Biology
- Mitochondrial DNA
- Genome
- Gene
- Genetics
- Viscum album
- Eukaryote
- Multicellular organism
- Life in Land