Mitochondrial and plastid genome variability of Corallina officinalis (Corallinales, Rhodophyta)

Corallina officinalis is a calcifying red alga, common in tide pools in the North Atlantic with occasional reports from the north-east Pacific. It is an important habitat-forming alga, providing shelter and substrata to many other organisms. To date there are only five published organellar genomes f...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yesson, Chris, Xueni Bian, Williamson, Christopher, Briscoe, Andrew G, Brodie, Juliet
Format: Dataset
Language:unknown
Published: Taylor & Francis 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.13134725
https://tandf.figshare.com/articles/dataset/Mitochondrial_and_plastid_genome_variability_of_i_Corallina_officinalis_i_Corallinales_Rhodophyta_/13134725
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Summary:Corallina officinalis is a calcifying red alga, common in tide pools in the North Atlantic with occasional reports from the north-east Pacific. It is an important habitat-forming alga, providing shelter and substrata to many other organisms. To date there are only five published organellar genomes for Corallina , including C. chilensis and C. ferreyrae . This study reports the first four published plastid genomes for C. officinalis , along with three new mitogenomes from samples in the United Kingdom, Spain and Iceland. The plastid genome is 178 kbp and 99.9% of bases are identical for all samples. The mitogenomes are more variable than the plastid genomes, with lengths varying from 26.2 to 26.7 kbp and 99.0% base identity. Structure and length of both of the genomes are consistent with other published Corallina genomes. The most variable mitochondrial gene is sdh D (3.3% variability), while all plastid genes have <1% base variability, with the most variable being psb 30 (0.95% variability). The stability of the plastid genome means it is not useful for examining intra-specific variability within Corallina . We discuss whether the ratio of mitogenome and plastome sequences recovered in the readpool of NGS sequencing is indicative of relative copy number.