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Article|10 Jan 2024|OPEN
Leaf variegation caused by plastome structural variation: an example from Dianella tasmanica
Shuaixi Zhou1 , Kainan Ma1 , Jeffrey P. Mower2 , , Ying Liu1 , and Renchao Zhou,1 ,
1State Key Laboratory of Biocontrol and Guangdong Provincial Key Laboratory of Plant Resources, School of Life Sciences, Sun Yat-sen University, Guangzhou 510275, China
2Center for Plant Science Innovation and Department of Agronomy and Horticulture, University of Nebraska, Lincoln, NE 68588, USA
*Corresponding author. E-mail: jpmower@unl.edu,liuyng73@mail.sysu.edu.cn,zhrench@mail.sysu.edu.cn

Horticulture Research 11,
Article number: uhae009 (2024)
doi: https://doi.org/10.1093/hr/uhae009
Views: 34

Received: 16 Aug 2023
Accepted: 01 Jan 2024
Published online: 10 Jan 2024

Abstract

Variegated plants often exhibit plastomic heteroplasmy due to single-nucleotide mutations or small insertions/deletions in their albino sectors. Here, however, we identified a plastome structural variation in albino sectors of the variegated plant Dianella tasmanica (Asphodelaceae), a perennial herbaceous plant widely cultivated as an ornamental in tropical Asia. This structural variation, caused by intermolecular recombination mediated by an 11-bp inverted repeat flanking a 92-bp segment in the large single-copy region (LSC), generates a giant plastome (228 878 bp) with the largest inverted repeat of 105 226 bp and the smallest LSC of 92 bp known in land plants. It also generates an ~7-kb deletion on the boundary of the LSC, which eliminates three protein coding genes (psbAmatK, and rps16) and one tRNA gene (trnK). Albino sectors exhibit dramatic changes in expression of many plastid genes, including negligible expression of psbAmatK, and rps16, reduced expression of photosynthesis-related genes, and increased expression of genes related to the translational apparatus. Microscopic and ultrastructure observations showed that albino tissues were present in both green and albino sectors of the variegated individuals, and chloroplasts were poorly developed in the mesophyll cells of the albino tissues of the variegated individuals. These poorly developed chloroplasts likely carry the large and rearranged plastome, which is likely responsible for the loss of photosynthesis and albinism in the leaf margins. Considering that short repeats are relatively common in plant plastomes and that photosynthesis is not necessary for albino sectors, structural variation of this kind may not be rare in the plastomes of variegated plants.