Chloroplast Genome Evolution of Berberis (Berberidaceae): Implications for Phylogeny and Metabarcoding

45 Pages Posted: 21 Jun 2024

See all articles by Hui Li

Hui Li

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Abd Ullah

Quaid-i-Azam University

Hongxia Yang

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Hua Guo

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Ye Yuan

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Ibrar Ahmed

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science (KRISS)

Guohui Li

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Yu Wang

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Yan-xu Chang

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine - State Key Laboratory of Component-based Chinese Medicine

Xiaoxuan Tian

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine

Abstract

Berberidis Radix (Sankezhen), a typical multiorigin Chinese medicinal material, originates from the dried roots of plants of the Berberis genus and is used to treat a range of ailments. These species have similar morphologies, potentially leading to misidentifications that can impact medicine efficacy. Therefore, it is imperative to develop suitable molecular markers to identify medicinal species. Furthermore, discrepancies exist in the taxonomy of the Berberis genus. In the present study, we de novo assembled the chloroplast genomes of six Berberis species (Berberis woomungensis C. Y. Wu, Berberis pruinosa Franch., Berberis thunbergii DC., Berberis chinensis Poir., Berberis wilsoniae Hemsl., and Berberis sp.) that commonly constitute Berberidis Radix and compared them with previously reported genomes. Our comparative analysis revealed similarities in genome structure, relative synonymous codon usage, amino acid frequency, repeats, and substitutions. Higher synonymous substitutions, indicative of predominant purifying selection on protein-coding genes, were observed compared to non-synonymous substitutions. However, positive selection was identified in six genes across 29 Berberis species—accD, matK, ndhD, rbcL, ycf1, and ycf2—highlighting their potential roles in adaptive responses to specific environmental conditions within the genus. Inverted repeats expansion and contraction affected the rate of mutations and were associated with the phylogenetic classification of Berberis. Our phylogenetic analysis supported the division of the Berberis complex into four genera, which corroborates previous studies involving extensive sampling. We identified the ndhD-ccsA region as the most polymorphic region and applied this region to Chinese patent medicines containing Berberidis Radix through metabarcoding. Metabarcoding analysis confirmed that five Berberis species commonly constitute Berberidis Radix in Chinese patent medicines. In conclusion, this study provides insight into the molecular evolution of the chloroplast genome and the phylogeny of the Berberis genus. In addition, metabarcoding provides insight into the species composition of Berberidis Radix in Chinese patent medicines.

Keywords: Berberis, Berberidis Radix, Chloroplast genome, Phylogenetic, Molecular marker, Metabarcoding

Suggested Citation

Li, Hui and Ullah, Abd and Yang, Hongxia and Guo, Hua and Yuan, Ye and Ahmed, Ibrar and Li, Guohui and Wang, Yu and Chang, Yan-xu and Tian, Xiaoxuan, Chloroplast Genome Evolution of Berberis (Berberidaceae): Implications for Phylogeny and Metabarcoding. Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=4869821 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.4869821

Hui Li

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Abd Ullah

Quaid-i-Azam University ( email )

3rd Avenue
Islamabad, 44000
Pakistan

Hongxia Yang

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Hua Guo

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Ye Yuan

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Ibrar Ahmed

Korea Research Institute of Standards and Science (KRISS) ( email )

Guohui Li

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Yu Wang

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Yan-xu Chang

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine - State Key Laboratory of Component-based Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

Xiaoxuan Tian (Contact Author)

Tianjin University of Traditional Chinese Medicine ( email )

Tianjin
China

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