A Comparison of the First Two Sequenced Chloroplast Genomes in Asteraceae: Lettuce and Sunflower (original) (raw)

Asteraceae is the second largest family of plants, with over 20,000 species. For the past few decades, numerous phylogenetic studies have contributed to our understanding of the evolutionary relationships within this family, including comparisons of the fast evolving chloroplast gene, ndhF , rbcL, as well as non-coding DNA from the trnL intron plus the trnL-trnF intergenic spacer 4], matK [5], and, with lesser resolution, psbA-trnH [6]. This culminated in a study by Panero and Funk in 2002 [1] that used over 13,000 bp per taxon for the largest taxonomic revision of Asteraceae in over a hundred years. Still, some uncertainties remain, and it would be very useful to have more information on the relative rates of sequence evolution among various genes and on genome structure as a potential set of phylogenetic characters to help guide future phylogenetic structures.