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1.
Mitochondrial DNA B Resour ; 7(10): 1761-1763, 2022.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36237205

ABSTRACT

Sonneratia griffithii Kurz is a critically endangered mangrove species that can be found along the western coast of Thailand. In this study, we reported the complete chloroplast genome of S. griffithii. The chloroplast genome is 152,730 bp, consisting of one large single-copy (LSC) region, one small single-copy (SSC) region and a pair of inverted repeats (IRs). The LSC, SSC, and IR lengths are 87,226, 17,764, and 23,870 bp, respectively. The genome contains 113 unique genes, including 79 protein-coding, 30 tRNA, and 4 rRNA genes. The GC content of the chloroplast genome is 37.31%. The phylogenetic analysis based on 76 protein-coding genes showed a monophyletic group of S. griffithii and other Sonneratia species.

2.
Biology (Basel) ; 11(10)2022 Oct 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36290353

ABSTRACT

Rhizophora apiculata is one of the most widespread and economically important mangrove trees in the Indo-West Pacific region. Knowledge of the genetic variation of R. apiculata in Thailand is limited. Here, we generated a whole-genome sequence of R. apiculata using the 10× Genomics technology. R. apiculata genome assembly was 230.47 Mb. Based on its genome, 2640 loci of high-quality biallelic SNPs were identified from 82 R. apiculata accessions collected from 17 natural mangrove forests in Thailand to assess the genetic diversity and population structure among them. A moderate level of genetic diversity of R. apiculata was observed. The average observed heterozygosity (Ho = 0.48) was higher than the average expected heterozygosity (He = 0.36). Two subpopulations were observed and confirmed from three approaches: population structure, PCA, and phylogenetic analyses. They corresponded to the Gulf of Thailand and the Andaman Sea separated by the Malay Peninsula. AMOVA analyses indicated that genetic variation was attributable to 76.22% within populations and 23.78% among populations. A high level of genetic differentiation between the two subpopulations (FST = 0.24, p < 0.001) was observed. This study evaluated the genetic diversity and population structure of R. apiculata, providing useful information for sustainable mangrove management in Thailand.

3.
Genomics ; 114(3): 110382, 2022 05.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35526741

ABSTRACT

Mangroves are plants that live in tropical and subtropical coastal regions of the world, they are adapted to high salt environments and cyclic tidal flooding. Mangroves play important ecological roles, including acting as breeding grounds for many fish species and to prevent coastal erosion. The genomes of three mangrove species, Bruguiera gymnorhiza, Bruguiera cylindrica, and a hybrid of the two, Bruguiera hainesii were sequenced, assembled and annotated. The two progenitor species, B. gymnorhiza and B. cylindrica, were found to be highly similar to each other and sufficiently similar to B. parviflora to allow it to be used for reference based scaffolding to generate chromosome level scaffolds. The two subgenomes of B. hainesii were independently assembled and scaffolded. Analysis of B. hainesii confirms that it is a hybrid and the hybridisation event was estimated at 2.4 to 3.5 million years ago using a Bayesian Relaxed Molecular Clock approach.


Subject(s)
Rhizophoraceae , Animals , Rhizophoraceae/genetics , Bayes Theorem , Plant Breeding
4.
Mol Ecol Resour ; 22(5): 1939-1953, 2022 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35060320

ABSTRACT

Mangrove forest ecosystems support a diverse flora and fauna of marine and terrestrial species and have important direct and indirect economic, ecological and social values to mankind. Yellow mangrove (Bruguiera parviflora) belongs to the Rhizophoraceae family and is widely distributed in the intertidal zones along sheltered coastal areas in tropical latitudes. Here, we present a high-quality, chromosome-level assembly of the B. parviflora genome. We employed the 10x Genomics linked-read technology to obtain a preliminary assembly, which was subsequently scaffolded using the long-range chromatin contact mapping technique (HiC) to obtain a final assembly containing 213,026,782 bases in 10,045 scaffolds with an N50 length of 10,906,948 bases. Our gene prediction recovered 96.5% of the highly conserved orthologues in the Embryophyta lineage based on the Benchmarking Universal Single-Copy Orthologues (BUSCO) analysis. We analysed the transversion rate at fourfold-degenerate sites from orthologous gene pairs and discovered evidence supporting a recent whole-genome duplication event in B. parviflora and other Rhizophoreae members. Comparative studies based on single-copy orthologous genes indicated that B. parviflora and Bruguiera gymnorrhiza diverged approximately 24.1 million years ago. The population structure analysis revealed that 63 B. parviflora accessions from different geographical regions in Thailand were an admixture of two subpopulations. The examination of alternative splicing events in B. parviflora showed that the most prevalent splicing mechanism was intron retention. This high-quality genome assembly together with the genetic diversity information obtained from the germplasm provide useful genomic resources for future studies on comparative phylogenetics and evolution of adaptive traits in mangrove species.


Subject(s)
Rhizophoraceae , Chromosomes , Ecosystem , Gene Duplication , Genome , Rhizophoraceae/genetics
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