DNA sequencing unlocks 100 mln yrs of flowering plants’ evolution
February 24th, 2010 - 5:47 pm ICT by ANIWashington, Feb 24 (ANI): A new study has unraveled 100 million years of evolution of flowering plants by sequencing the DNA of plant genomes.
The study, by University of Florida researchers, targets one of the major moments in plant evolution, when the ancestors of most of the world’s flowering plants split into two major groups.
Together, the two groups make up nearly 70 percent of all flowering plants and are part of a larger clade known as Pentapetalae, which means five petals.
Understanding how these plants are related is a large undertaking that could help ecologists better understand which species are more vulnerable to environmental factors such as climate change.
Together, the two groups make up nearly 70 percent of all flowering plants and are part of a larger clade known as Pentapetalae, which means five petals.
Understanding how these plants are related is a large undertaking that could help ecologists better understand which species are more vulnerable to environmental factors such as climate change.
“This paper and others show flowering plants as layer after layer of bursts of evolution,” said Doug Soltis, study co-author and UF distinguished professor of biology. “Now it’s falling together into two big groups,” he added.
The new study at UF’s Florida Museum of Natural History analyzed 86 complete plastid genome sequences from a wide range of plant species.
Plastids are the plant cell component responsible for photosynthesis.
Previous genetic analyses of Pentapetalae failed to untangle the relationships among living species, suggesting that the plants diverged rapidly over 5 million years.
Researchers selected genomes to sequence based on their best guess of genetic relationships from the previous sequencing work.
Genome sequencing is more time-consuming for plants than animals because plastid DNA is about 10 times larger than the mitochondrial DNA used in studying animal genomes.
But, continual improvements in DNA sequencing technology are now allowing researchers to analyze those larger amounts of data more quickly.
The study provides an important framework for further investigating evolutionary relationships by providing a much clearer picture of the deep divergence that led to the split within flowering plants, which then led to speciation in the two separate branches.
Eventually, researchers hope to match these evolutionary bursts with geological and climatic events in the earth’s history.
“I think we’re starting to get to a point with a dated tree where we could start looking at what was happening at some of those time frames,” Pam Soltis said. (ANI)
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Tags: 100 million years, animal genomes, best guess, clade, climate change, dna sequencing, environmental factors, florida museum of natural history, florida researchers, flowering plants, genetic analyses, genetic relationships, mitochondrial dna, museum of natural history, photosynthesis, plant cell, plant evolution, plant genomes, plastid, soltis