Abstract
Plants belonging to family Paeoniaceae are not only economically important ornamental plants but also medicinal plants used as an important source of traditional Chinese medicine. Owing to the complex network evolution and polyploidy evolution of this family, its systematics and taxonomy are controversial and require a detailed investigation. In this study, three complete chloroplast genomes of sect. Paeonia, one of the sections of Paeonia, were sequenced and then analysed together with 16 other published chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae species. The total lengths of the chloroplast genomes of these species were 152,153–154,405 bp. A total of 82–87 protein-coding genes, 31–40 tRNA genes and 8 rRNA genes were annotated. Bioinformatics analysis revealed 61–74 simple sequence repeats (SSRs) in the chloroplast genomes, most of which have A/T base preference. Codon usage analysis showed that A/U-ending codons were more positive than C/G-ending codons, and a slight bias in codon usage was observed in these species. A comparative analysis of these 19 species of Paeoniaceae was then conducted. Fourteen highly variable regions were selected for species relationship study. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that the species of sect. Paeonia gathered in one branch and then divided into different small branches. P. lactiflora, P. anomala, P. anomala subsp. veitchii and P. mairei clustered together. P. intermedia was related to P. obovata and P. obovata subsp. willmottiae. P. emodi was the sister to all other species in the sect. Paeonia.
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Introduction
Paeonia is a single genus in family Paeoniaceae, which is derived from family Ranunculaceae. Since the Swedish taxonomist Carl von Linne (1735) established the genus Paeonia, the widely used classification systems back then, such as the Engler system and the Hooker system, placed Paeonia in family Ranunculaceae and remained classified under this family for over 200 years1. At the beginning of the twentieth century, Worsdell discovered that the stamens of Paeonia develop centrifugally unlike the other genera in Ranunculaceae. Consequently, Paeonia was finally separated from this family and classified under Paeoniaceae, but it was still placed in Order Ranunculales2. Numerous extensive studies on Paeonia covering plant morphology, anatomy, palynology, embryology, phytochemistry, chromosome number determination and karyotyping, plant reproductive genetics, and phytogeography have led to the unanimous opinion supporting the establishment of Paeoniaceae3. In 1946, Stern divided Paeonia into three sections, namely, sect. Moutan, sect. Paeonia and sect. Onaepia4. Species of sect. Paeonia and sect. Onaepia are herbaceous, whereas species of sect. Moutan are subshrubs5. Sect. Onaepia has only two species, which are distributed in western North America. Sect. Paeonia, which is the most diverse section, has over 20 species that are widely distributed in temperate climate areas of Eurasia. Seven species and two subspecies of sect. Paeonia are distributed in China. Eight species and six subspecies of sect. Moutan, which are mainly distributed in the southwest and northwest of China, are endemic to the country6. Paeoniaceae plants are economically important ornamental plants known for their attractive flowers. Moreover, these plants have high medicinal value. Monoterpene glycosides, flavonoids, tannins, stilbene, triterpenoids and other compounds have been found in species of Paeoniaceae7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,16. These compounds have antioxidation, antitumor and antipathogenic properties and play a role in immune system regulation, cardiovascular system protection, central nervous system protection and optic nerve protection17,18,19,20,21,22,23.
Section Paeonia is the only section with chromosome ploidy changes. Species of sect. Moutan and sect. Onaepia are all diploid, whereas species of sect. Paeonia have diploid and tetraploid chromosomes24. The existence of different ploidy in sect. Paeonia makes its phylogenetic relationship very complicated. The tetraploid species in this section were initially thought to be homologous tetraploids4,25. However, morphological, cytogenetic and molecular phylogenetic studies showed that this section has allotetraploid species, and some tetraploid groups originated from interspecific hybridisation of two different subgroups26,27,28,29,30,31,32,33,34,35. Although evidence exists that tetraploid groups are mostly of heterogenetic origin, the origin and classification of sect. Paeonia are controversial because of the consistent karyotype, similar morphology and overlapping geographical distributions of species belonging to this section36. In classical taxonomy, the use of phenotypic traits alone to infer phylogenetic relationships between taxa with different genotypes is replete with problems33. These taxonomic problems caused by different understandings of morphological variations can be resolved using molecular markers independent of morphological features. Early researchers focused on the study of DNA fragment-labelling techniques or phylogenetic analysis based on nuclear or chloroplast DNA fragments37,38,39,40,41,42,43. Based on the results of ITS and matK phylogenetic analysis, Sang et al.33 constructed the reticular evolution model diagram of sect. Paeonia. However, phylogenetic analysis showed that the results of ITS and matK only provided partial information on the origin of allotetraploid groups36. Owing to chromosomal ploidy, complex network evolution and polyploidy evolution26, limited nuclear or chloroplast DNA fragments cannot provide sufficient phylogenetic information to effectively solve the interspecies relationships of sect. Paeonia. Research on the genetic diversity of sect. Paeonia is relatively slow, and related studies at the molecular level are not comprehensive44. The relationships among species of sect. Moutan have such problems because of their complex evolution and phylogeny32,33,45,46,47,48,49.
The chloroplast genome is an organ independent of the nuclear genome. The chloroplast genome can be maternally inherited, has highly conserved gene content and order and has a slow molecular evolution and a low recombination rate, making it an ideal material for species authentication and phylogenetic studies50,51,52,53. Most of the chloroplast genomes of angiosperms have a circular tetrad structure, which consists of two inverted repeats (IRs), a large single copy (LSC) and a small single copy (SSC)54. The chloroplast genome has been applied to phylogenetic analysis and species identification of multiple plants55,56,57,58,59,60. Therefore, we can use the chloroplast genome to analyse the relationship among species of Paeoniaceae. In this study, the complete chloroplast genomes of three species of sect. Paeonia were sequenced and analysed together with other Paeoniaceae species. Comparative and phylogenetic analyses were then performed on the chloroplast genomes of 19 species of Paeoniaceae, including 8, 10 and 1 chloroplast genomes of sect. Paeonia, sect. Moutan and sect. Onaepia, respectively.
Results and discussion
Statistics and genetic composition of 19 Paeoniaceae chloroplast genomes
The chloroplast genomes of 19 Paeoniaceae species were all classical tetrad structures containing an LSC, an SSC and a pair of IRs (Fig. 1). The total lengths of the chloroplast genomes were 152,153 (P. ostii)–154,405 bp (P. delavayi). Total GC contents ranged from 38.32% (P. ostia and P. rockii) to 38.55% (P. brownii). The lengths of the IR, LSC and SSC regions were 24,729–26,049, 84,241–86,316, and 16,679–17,059 bp, respectively. The GC contents of the four regions were not balanced. The IR regions had the highest GC content (42.98–43.16%), followed by the LSC (36.63–36.83%) and the SSC regions (32.57–33.02%) (Supplementary Table S1).
The structure and gene composition of the chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae species can be divided into 14 categories (Fig. 1). The proteins produced by different combinations of domains are different in nature, and the identification of protein domains is particularly important for analysing protein functions. The protein functional domains of protein-coding genes in the Paeoniaceae species are listed in Fig. 2. A total of 82–87 protein-coding genes, 31–40 tRNA genes and 8 rRNA genes were annotated in the Paeoniaceae species. In the three chloroplast genomes obtained in this study, seven protein-coding genes (rpl2, rpl23, ycf2, ycf15, ndhB, rps7 and rps12), seven tRNAs (trnI-CAU, trnL-CAA, trnV-GAC, trnI-GAU, trnA-UGC, trnR-ACG and trnN-GUU) and four rRNAs (rrn16, rrn23, rrn4.5 and rrn5) were located in the IR regions. Introns play an important role in the regulation of gene expression, and it can enhance the expression of exogenous genes at specific loci of plants and produce ideal agronomic traits61. Among the protein-coding genes, 18 genes contained introns, of which 3 genes (clpP, rps12 and ycf3) contained two introns, whereas the remaining 15 genes contained only one intron (Supplementary Table S2). rps12 gene is a trans-splicing gene with a 5′ end in the LSC region and a 3′ end in the IR region, similar to that of many other plants62,63,64.
Analysis of codon usage bias of the chloroplast genomes
The choice of synonymous codons for amino acids encoded by an organism’s genes is not completely random, and there is codon usage bias65. Codon usage bias not only plays an important regulatory role in gene expression level but also helps to improve the accuracy and efficiency of translation66,67. In addition to being affected by selection and mutation, codon usage is affected by tRNA abundance, base composition, gene position on chromosomes, gene length and expression level, amino acid hydrophobicity and mRNA secondary structure68,69,70,71,72,73,74. Paeoniaceae species can be divided into groups A and B according to the codon usage of chloroplast genomes. Group B included P. lactiflora, P. obovata, P. rockii and P. rockii subsp. taibaishanica, whereas group A included the remaining 15 species.
The relative synonymous codon usage (RSCU) of the chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae species was calculated on the basis of all protein-coding genes (Supplementary Table S3). Results showed that the chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae species contained 64 types of codons encoding 20 amino acids. In group A, of all amino acid codons, leucine had the highest number of codons, whereas cysteine had the lowest number of codons. Thirty-one codons were found with an RSCU of > 1, of which 29 were A/U-ending codons; 33 codons were found with an RSCU of ≤ 1, of which 30 were G/C-ending codons. The highest RSCU value was recorded for UUA and the lowest for UAC, which encode leucine and tyrosine, respectively. In group B, serine had the highest number of codons, and methionine had the lowest number of codons. Furthermore, 29 (P. obovata) and 30 (P. lactiflora, P. rockii and P. rockii subsp. taibaishanica) codons were found with an RSCU of > 1, of which 26 (P. lactiflora and P. obovata) and 27 (P. rockii and P. rockii subsp. taibaishanica) were A/U-ending codons. Moreover, 34 (P. lactiflora, P. rockii and P. rockii subsp. taibaishanica) and 35 (P. obovata) codons were found with an RSCU of ≤ 1, of which 29 (P. obovata) and 32 (P. lactiflora, P. rockii and P. rockii subsp. taibaishanica) were G/C-ending codons. The highest RSCU value was recorded for AGA and the lowest for CUG, which encode arginine and leucine, respectively. To conclude, A/U-ending codons were more positive than G/C-ending codons (Fig. 3).
GC refers to the total content of all codons G and C, and GC3s pertains to the frequency of G and C bases in the third codon base of synonymous codons encoding the same amino acid. GC reflects the strength of directional mutation pressure, and GC3s is closely related to codon bias75. The main difference in synonymous codons is reflected in the third base, and a change in this base of codons usually does not cause changes in encoded amino acids. Therefore, the selection pressure on the third base of the codon is less selective. GC3s is used as an important basis for analysing codon usage pattern76. GC and GC3s in the codons of these 19 chloroplast genomes were all less than 0.5, indicating that the chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae species tended to use A/T bases and A/T-ending codons. Codon adaptation index values and effective number of codon values indicated a slight bias in codon usage in the Paeoniaceae species. Frequency of optimal codons was relatively low. In addition, the hydrophobicity of the protein (i.e., Gravy) and the aromatic protein (i.e., Aromo) had little effect on codon usage bias. Compared with those in group A, the species in group B had higher GC and GC3s contents and slighter codon usage bias, and Gravy and Aromo had a greater influence on codon usage bias (Table 1).
Long repeat sequences and SSRs
Long repeats play an important role in genome rearrangement and are often used to study phylogenetic relationships between species; moreover, they promote intermolecular recombination in the chloroplast genomes of plants to produce diversity77. Long repeat sequences include forward, palindrome, reverse and complement. For all repeat types, repeat length is ≥ 30 bp and sequence similarity is ≥ 90%. In Paeoniaceae species, our results revealed 36–63 long repeats, most of which were forward (17–29) and palindrome (18–31) repeats. Complement repeats were the least distributed and found only in P. anomala, P. anomala subsp. veitchii, P. lactiflora, P. mairei and P. rockii. In addition, the length of these repeats was mainly within the range of 30–39 bp. Repeats with a length of ≥ 70 bp only existed in P. brownie, P. ostia and P. rockii subsp. taibaishanica (Fig. 4) (Supplementary Table S4).
SSRs, also known as microsatellite sequences, are a kind of tandem repeat sequences consisting of 1–6 repeating nucleotide units that are widely distributed throughout chloroplast genomes78. Owing to their high polymorphism, SSRs are increasingly used as molecular markers, in species identification and in studying population genetics and phylogenetic relationships79,80,81. A total of 61–74 SSRs were identified in the chloroplast genomes of the Paeoniaceae species. In addition, the base composition of the repeating motifs from mononucleotide repeats to trinucleotide repeats had a certain base preference, mainly the repeating motifs rich in A–T. In these SSRs, mononucleotide repeats were the largest in number, which were found 39–49 times in these chloroplast genomes. A/T repeats (91.7–100%) were the most common mononucleotide repeats, whereas the majority of dinucleotide repeat sequences comprised of AT/AT repeats (88.9–92.9%), and all of trinucleotide repeats were AAT/ATT, except for P. delavayi. These results were consistent with A-T enrichment in complete chloroplast genomes82. Moreover, compared with polyC and polyG, polyA and polyT occupy a relatively high proportion in the SSRs of many plants83. ACG/CGT, AAAAG/CTTTT and AATAT/ATATT were found to be unique in P. delavayi, P. anomala and P. jishanensis, respectively (Fig. 4) (Supplementary Table S5).
Comparative analysis of chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae
In this study, the complete chloroplast genomes of 19 species of Paeoniaceae were compared using mVISTA84 with the P. intermedia genome as the reference genome (Fig. 5). Overall, the comparative genomic analysis revealed that the 19 Paeoniaceae chloroplast genomes were relatively conserved. Intergenic spacers and intron regions showed more variations than protein-coding regions. Most protein-coding regions had a very high degree of conservation (most had > 90% similarity), and rRNA genes (rrn4.5, rrn5, rrn16 and rrn23) were highly conserved with almost no variation. Variations in the SSC and LSC regions were considerably greater than those in the IR regions, similar to studies in other plants85,86,87,88,89.
A co-linear analysis of the 19 Paeoniaceae chloroplast genomes was conducted with the P. intermedia genome as the reference genome. Results showed that the entire genome sequence was a homologous region with no big indels. The 19 chloroplast genomes connected with a line, indicating that the chloroplast genomes of these species were relatively conserved, and no rearrangement occurred in gene organisation (Fig. 6).
Mutational hotspots of shared genes and intergenic spacers of the chloroplast genomes of the 19 Paeoniaceae species were identified by DnaSP90. The intergenic spacers had more polymorphisms (average Pi = 0.00955) than the gene regions (average Pi = 0.00393). Moreover, the largest nucleic acid variation was observed in the SSC regions (average Pi in intergenic spacers = 0.01107; average Pi in gene regions = 0.00568), followed by that in the LSC regions (average Pi in intergenic spacers = 0.01045; average Pi in gene regions = 0.00408) and that in the IR regions (average Pi in intergenic spacers = 0.00391; average Pi in gene regions = 0.00124). These results were consistent with those of mVISTA analysis. Seven protein-coding genes (rps18, ndhF, rps3, rpl16, psbH, rps16 and matK) positioned at the single copy regions exhibited high Pi values (> 0.008) (Fig. 7A). By comparison, seven intergenic spacers (petG-trnW-CCA, petA-psbJ, petL-petG, psbK-psbI, accD-psaI, ndhE-ndhG and rpl14-rpl16) showed high diversity values (> 0.015) (Fig. 7B).
Phylogenetic analysis of Paeoniaceae
Chloroplast genomes play an important role in phylogenetic studies91,92. In the current study, the complete chloroplast genome sequences of 19 Paeoniaceae species and 32 Ranunculaceae species were used to construct a phylogenetic tree. Stephania tetrandra served as the outgroup (Fig. 8). Results showed that all nodes in the phylogenetic tree had high bootstrap values. Paeoniaceae species clustered in one branch, whereas Ranunculaceae species were clearly distinguished from Paeoniaceae species, supporting the argument that Paeoniaceae is a family independent from Ranunculaceae. Species of subsect. Vaginatae and subsect. Delavayanae of sect. Moutan clustered in different branches, and the species relationship in sect. Moutan was consistent with that reported by a previous study93. With regard to species of sect. Paeonia, P. lactiflora, P. anomala, P. anomala subsp. veitchii and P. mairei clustered together. Pan36 found that P. sterniana is closely related to them. Xia43 analysed the genetic relationship of sect. Paeonia and found that P. lactiflora is closely related to P. anomala and P. anomala subsp. veitchii. Zhang et al.94 found that P. anomala, P. anomala subsp. veitchii and P. mairei are closely related and far from P. obovata according to the results of ML-based phylogenetic analysis using complete chloroplast genomes. The results of the current study were consistent with those of the aforementioned studies. P. obovata, P. obovata subsp. willmottiae and P. intermedia clustered together, and P. emodi was the sister to all other species in the sect. Paeonia. This branching pattern was consistent with that of the phylogenetic tree constructed by Zhou et al. by using chloroplast markers95. Furthermore, the relationship between sect. Moutan and sect. Onaepia was close. The result of phylogenetic tree based on SNPs (single-nucleotide polymorphisms) showed that the species relationship in Paeoniaceae was consistent with that based on the complete chloroplast genome sequences (Fig. 9). However, the relationship between sect. Moutan and sect. Paeonia was close in the tree based on SNPs, which was more coincident with the geographical distribution.
Among the 14 highly variable regions, matK appeared suitable for phylogenetic analysis of the species of sect. Paeonia, which was consistent with that based on complete chloroplast genomes. The other 13 highly variable regions were found to be unsuitable for the identification and phylogenetic analysis of Paeoniaceae species (Supplementary Fig. S1) mainly because of inadequate variations provided by a limited number of DNA loci, which was insufficient to distinguish these conservative species96. A previous study also demonstrated that complete chloroplast genome sequences have a higher resolution than highly variable regions and can be used to identify related species97, consistent with the current study.
Materials and methods
DNA sources
Fresh leaves of P. intermedia, P. emodi and P. anomala were collected from a garden in Xiaohongcun, Luanchuan County, Henan Province, China, which were transplanted from Tacheng in Xinjiang Autonomous Region (P. intermedia and P. anomala) and Shannan in Xizang Autonomous Region (P. emodi). These three species were identified by Prof. Peigen Xiao and Prof. Chunnian He from the Institute of Medicinal Plant Development (IMPLAD), Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences and Peking Union Medical College. Voucher specimens were deposited in the herbarium at IMPLAD, and the ID numbers were Y19075 (P. intermedia), Y19076 (P. emodi), and Y19078 (P. anomala). The collected fresh leaves were stored in a − 80 ℃ refrigerator until use.
DNA extraction, sequencing, assembly and annotation
Total DNA was extracted using a DNease plant mini kit (Qiagen, Germany). Total DNA concentration was detected using a microspectrophotometer (Nanodrop 2000, USA), and total DNA quality was detected via 1% agarose gel electrophoresis. The DNA was then used to generate libraries with an average insert size of 500 bp and sequenced using Illumina Hiseq X in accordance with standard protocols. Paired-end sequencing was performed to obtain 150 bp sequences at both ends of each read. The NGS data was stated in Supplementary Table S6. Low-quality regions in the original data were trimmed by Trimmomatic software98, and mapped back using bwa to get the sequencing depth. The average genome coverage depth for P. intermedia, P. emodi, and P. anomala was 937×, 1037×, and 1113×, respectively. The Basic Local Alignment Search Tool database was constructed from the chloroplast genome sequences published on the National Centre for Biological Information. Clean reads were then compared with this database, and mapped reads were extracted according to coverage and similarity. The extracted reads were spliced into several contigs by using SOAPdenovo 299 and NOVOPlasty100. The contigs were connected to complete chloroplast genome sequences by using the SSPACE software101, and gaps were filled using the GapCloser software99. The sequences were initially annotated by using the CPGAVAS software102 and the GeSeq103 and corrected manually. tRNAs were annotated using the tRNAscan-SE software104. Genes, introns and the boundaries of coding regions were compared with reference sequences.
Structural, comparative and phylogenetic analyses
Chloroplast genome maps were generated using Chloroplot105 and then manually corrected. Protein functional domains of protein-coding genes were searched by Pfam106. The CodonW software107 was adopted to analyse the usage of codon. SSRs and long repeat sequences were detected using the MISA108 and REPuter109, respectively. The chloroplast genomes were compared by using the mVISTA software84 to detect variations within the Paeoniaceae species. Chloroplast genome sequence homology and collinearity were analysed using the Mauve software110. The nucleotide diversity values (Pi) of chloroplast genomes of Paeoniaceae species were computed using DnaSP v5.1090, and 14 highly variable regions were selected. All chloroplast genome sequences were aligned by MAFFT software111. Tree models were selected and phylogenetic trees were constructed by using the IQTREE software112. Phylogenetic trees were constructed based on the complete chloroplast genomes, SNPs, and 14 highly variable regions by ML methods. The SNPs were from the chloroplast genome sequences of Paeoniaceae species after alignment and removal of all indels113. ML analysis was conducted with a bootstrap of 1000 repetitions based on the TVM + F + R4 (complete chloroplast genomes), TVMe + ASC + R2 (SNPs), K3Pu + F (accD-psaI, matK, rps3 and rps16), TPM2u + F (ndhE-ndhG), K3Pu + F + I (ndhF, psbK-psbI and rpl16), TIM + F + G4 (petA-psbJ), K2P + I (petG-trnW-CCA), and F81 + F (petL-petG, psbH, rpl14-rpl16 and rps18) models.
All the experiment has been done in the accordance with relevant institutional, national, and international guidelines and legislation.
Specimen collection statement
The collection of fresh leaves obtained the permission of the owner.
Data availability
The assembled chloroplast genomes of P. intermedia, P. emodi and P. anomala were deposited in GenBank with the accession numbers MT210547, MT210548 and MT210549. The sequences are available on NCBI now: https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/MT210547, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/MT210548, https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/nuccore/MT210549.
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Acknowledgements
This research was funded by the Major Scientific and Technological Special Project for “Significant New Drugs Creation” (No. 2018ZX09711001-008-007) and Chinese Academy of Medical Sciences (CAMS) Innovation Fund for Medical Sciences (CIFMS) (No. 2016-I2M-3-016).
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Conceptualization, H.Y.; data curation, L.W.; formal analysis, L.W., L.N. and Q.W.; funding acquisition, H.Y.; investigation, L.W., L.N. and Q.W.; methodology, L.W., L.N. and Q.W.; project administration, H.Y.; resources, L.N., Y.W. and C.H.; software, Z.X. and J.S.; supervision, H.Y.; validation, H.Y.; visualization, L.W.; writing—original draft, L.W.; writing—review & editing, H.Y. All authors have read and agreed to the published version of the manuscript.
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Wu, L., Nie, L., Wang, Q. et al. Comparative and phylogenetic analyses of the chloroplast genomes of species of Paeoniaceae. Sci Rep 11, 14643 (2021). https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94137-0
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DOI: https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-021-94137-0
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