The Plant Genome (Mar 2024)
Characterization of the CMS genetic regulation through comparative complete mitochondrial genome sequencing in Nicotiana tabacum
Abstract
Abstract Mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomes) of flowering plants vary greatly in structure and size, which can lead to frequent gene mutation, rearrangement, or recombination, then result in the cytoplasmic male sterile (CMS) mutants. In tobacco (Nicotiana tabacum), suaCMS lines are widely used in heterosis breeding; however, the related genetic regulations are not very clear. In this study, the cytological observation indicated that the pollen abortion of tobacco suaCMS(HD) occurred at the very early stage of the stamen primordia differentiation. In this study, the complete mitochondrial genomes of suaCMS(HD) and its maintainer HD were sequenced using the PacBio and Illumina Hiseq technology. The total length of the assembled mitogenomes of suaCMS(HD) and HD was 494,317 bp and 430,694 bp, respectively. Comparative analysis indicated that the expanded 64 K bases in suaCMS(HD) were mainly located in noncoding regions, and 23 and 21 big syntenic blocks (>5000 bp) were found in suaCMS(HD) and HD with a series of repeats. Electron transport chain‐related genes were highly conserved in two mitogenomes, except five genes (ATP4, ATP6, COX2, CcmFC, and SDH3) with substantial substitutions. Three suaCMS(HD)‐specific genes, orf261, orf291, and orf433, were screened. Sequence analysis and RT‐PCR verification showed that they were unique to suaCMS(HD). Further gene location analysis and protein property prediction indicated that all the three genes were likely candidates for suaCMS(HD). This study provides new insight into understanding the suaCMS mechanism and is useful for improving tobacco breeding.