Continuous infiltration and evolutionary trajectory of nuclear organelle DNA in Oryza

Genome Research

2025-04 | Journal article

Abstract

Transfer of chloroplast or mitochondrial DNA into the nuclear genome is a common phenomenon in many species. However, little is known about the evolutionary fate and mechanism of transfer of organellar DNA sequences in higher plants. We observed abundant insertions of organelle DNA into the nuclear genomes of 22 genome assemblies across seven Oryza species and further categorized nuclear organelle DNA (NORG) into 3406 orthologous groups. Analysis of the whole-genome resequencing data from 3458 O. sativa, O. glaberrima, and O. barthii accessions indicated that NORGs have intra- and inter-population variability owing to sequence loss and transposon insertion during evolution. Our results also revealed that NORGs have been continuously produced during the evolution of Oryza, and both double-strand break repair pathways and replication-based mechanisms play important roles in integrating organelle DNA into the nuclear genome. Further investigation indicated that complex NORGs are formed through single mutational events before or during the insertion process via ligation of multiple plastid and/or mitochondrial DNA with each other. In summary, this work provides novel insights into the process of endosymbiotic DNA transfer and its role in reshaping genome variation and plant genome evolution.

Cite this article

Gong C, Huang Y, Liu M, Zhou Y, Xu Y, Mohammed N, Qiao X, Zuccolo A, Xie W, Wing R*Zhang J*, Zhou F*and Lin Y*. Continuous infiltration and evolutionary trajectory of nuclear organelle DNA in OryzaGenome Research, 2025, in press. DOI: 10.1101/gr.279609.124