Transcriptomes of the parasitic plant family Orobanchaceae reveal surprising conservation of chlorophyll synthesis

Curr Biol. 2011 Dec 20;21(24):2098-104. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2011.11.011. Epub 2011 Dec 8.

Abstract

Parasitism in flowering plants has evolved at least 11 times [1]. Only one family, Orobanchaceae, comprises all major nutritional types of parasites: facultative, hemiparasitic (partially photosynthetic), and holoparasitic (nonphotosynthetic) [2]. Additionally, the family includes Lindenbergia, a nonparasitic genus sister to all parasitic Orobanchaceae [3-6]. Parasitic Orobanchaceae include species with severe economic impacts: Striga (witchweed), for example, affects over 50 million hectares of crops in sub-Saharan Africa, causing more than $3 billion in damage annually [7]. Although gene losses and increased substitution rates have been characterized for parasitic plant plastid genomes [5, 8-11], the nuclear genome and transcriptome remain largely unexplored. The Parasitic Plant Genome Project (PPGP; http://ppgp.huck.psu.edu/) [2] is leveraging the natural variation in Orobanchaceae to explore the evolution and genomic consequences of parasitism in plants through a massive transcriptome and gene discovery project involving Triphysaria versicolor (facultative hemiparasite), Striga hermonthica (obligate hemiparasite), and Phelipanche aegyptiaca (Orobanche [12]; holoparasite). Here we present the first set of large-scale genomic resources for parasitic plant comparative biology. Transcriptomes of above-ground tissues reveal that, in addition to the predictable loss of photosynthesis-related gene expression in P. aegyptiaca, the nonphotosynthetic parasite retains an intact, expressed, and selectively constrained chlorophyll synthesis pathway.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, Non-P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Biological Evolution
  • Chlorophyll / genetics*
  • Expressed Sequence Tags
  • Genes, Plant
  • Molecular Sequence Data
  • Orobanchaceae / classification
  • Orobanchaceae / genetics*
  • Orobanchaceae / metabolism*
  • Photosynthesis
  • Phylogeny
  • Plant Shoots / genetics
  • Plant Shoots / physiology
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA
  • Species Specificity
  • Symbiosis*
  • Transcriptome*

Substances

  • Chlorophyll