Frontiers in Bioinformatics (Nov 2024)

Climatic factors, but not geographic distance, promote genetic structure and differentiation of Cleistogenes squarrosa (Trin.) Keng populations

  • Ruyan Song,
  • Xueli Zhang,
  • Zhuo Zhang,
  • Chan Zhou

DOI
https://doi.org/10.3389/fbinf.2024.1454689
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 4

Abstract

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Climate can shape plant genetic diversity and genetic structure, and genetic diversity and genetic structure can reflect the adaptation of plants to climate change. We used rbcl and trnL-trnF sequences to analyze the genetic diversity and genetic structure of C. squarrosa under the influence of different environmental factors in Inner Mongolia grassland. The results showed that the genetic diversity of this species was low. (The trnL-trnF sequences have higher genetic diversity than rbcl sequences.) C. squarrosa had low genetic diversity compared to other prairie plants, but had a more pronounced genetic structure. The haplotype network diagram of the combined sequences could be divided into two categories, and the results of the NJ, MP, and ML trees also showed that the haplotypes were divided into two branches. The results of genetic structure analysis showed that that the populations located in the desert steppe fall into exactly one cluster, and the populations located in the typical steppe fall into exactly another cluster. The neutrality tests were all negative and the mismatch distribution also showed a single peak across the population, suggesting that C. squarrosa had undergone population expansion and was well adapted to the local environment. The results of the mantel test showed that climate had a greater influence on the genetic distance of C. squarrosa, with annual precipitation having a higher influence than mean annual temperature. This study provided basic genetic information on the genetic structure of C. squarrosa and contributes to the study of genetic adaptation mechanisms in grassland plants.

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