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Strobilanthes bantonensis Lindau belongs to the family Acanthaceae. It is an antiviral herb that can be used to prevent Influenza virus infections in the border areas between China and Vietnam. Local people call it 'Purple Ban-lan-gen' because its root is very similar to that of Strobilanthes cusia (Nees) Kuntze, which is called 'Southern Ban-lan-gen' and is listed in Chinese Pharmacopeia. The two species have been used interchangeably locally. However, their pharmacological equivalence has caused concern for years. We have sequenced the chloroplast genome of S. cusia previously. In this study, we sequenced the complete chloroplast genome sequence of S. bantonensis to preform in-depth comparative genetic analysis of the two Strobilanthes species. The chloroplast genome of S. bantonensis is a circular DNA molecule with a total length of 144,591 bp and encodes 84 protein-coding, 8 ribosomes, and 37 transfer RNA genes. The chloroplast genome has a conservative quadripartite structure, including a large single-copy (LSC) region, a small single-copy (SSC) region, and a pair of inverted repeat (IR) regions, with lengths of 92,068 bp, 17,767 bp, and 17,378 bp, respectively. Phylogenetic analysis confirmed that S. SMAP activator cost bantonensis is closely related to the S. cusia. Compared with other species from Acanthaceae, S. bantonensis has a significantly shortened IR region, suggesting the occurrence of IR contraction events. This study will help future taxonomic, evolutionary, phylogenetic, and bioprospecting studies of the sizeable Strobilanthes genus, which contains over 400 species.Photinia davidsoniae is a common ornamental arbor in the genus Photinia (family Rosaceae). Here, we sequenced and assembled the complete plastome of P. davidsoniae using the next-generation DNA sequencing technology. And we then compared it with nine Photinia species using a range of bioinformatics software tools. The ten plastomes had sizes ranging from 159,230 bp for P. beckii to 160,346 bp for P. davidsoniae. They all had a conservative quartile structure. It contained two single-copy regions a large single-copy (LSC) region, a small single-copy (SSC) region, and a pair of inverted repeat (IR) regions. Each of the plastomes encoded 113 unique genes, including 79 protein-coding genes, four rRNA genes, and 30 tRNA genes. Furthermore, we detected six hypervariable regions (matK-rps16, rpoB-trnC, trnT-psbD, ndhC-trnV, psbE-petL, ndhF-rpl32-trnL), which could be used as potential molecular markers. We constructed two phylogenetic trees with plastomes or concatenated protein sequences of 25 species of 8 genera of Rosaceae. The tree constructed with complete plastomes has much stronger support. The results placed P. davidsoniae in the upper part of the phylogenetic tree. It shows that P. davidsoniae and P. lanuginosa are closely related. In summary, the plastomes of Photinia are conserved overall but carry significant minor variations, as expected. The results will be indispensable for distinguishing species, understanding the interspecific diversity, and elucidating the evolutionary processes of Photinia species.Brassica napus variety NY18 and 088018 are female and male parents of the national registered variety Ningza 1818, respectively. Here, we determined the complete mitochondrial genomes of these two varieties. The genome sizes of NY18 and 088018 were 221,864 bp and 222,015 bp, respectively. Both genomes contained 40 protein-coding genes, 21 tRNA genes, and three rRNA genes. Considerable structural variations existed between the two mitochondrial genomes, which were separated into five syntenic regions. Phylogenetic analysis using the maximum-likelihood method showed that the mitochondrial sequences of B. napus were closely clustered, forming a single clade which had a relatively close relationship with the clade formed by B. rapa, B. juncea, and B. oleracea.Exostoma gaoligongense is an endemic glyptosternine catfish distributed in the Nujiang River drainage, Yunnan Province, China, with few published genetic information. In this study, we sequenced and characterized the complete mitochondrial genome of E. gaoligongense, which was circular, 16529 bp in length, containing 13 protein-coding genes, 22 tRNA genes, 2 rRNA genes, one replication origin and one control region. Phylogenetic analysis revealed that E. gaoligongense had the closest relationship with its congener E. labiatum. They clustered with the clade containing most genera of glyptosternine catfishes and then cluster with the more primitive genera Glaridoglanis and Glyptosternon.Mallotus japonicus is a shrub species in the family of Euphorbiaceae. The study of plastome would be helpful for its phylogenetic study and species identification. The total length of complete plastome for Mallotus japonicus is of 164,912 bp, with typical part-four structure and gene content of angiosperm plastome, including two inverted repeat (IR) regions of 27,829 bp, a large single-copy (LSC) region of 90,319 bp, and a small single-copy (SSC) region of 18,935 bp. The plastome contains 125 genes, consisting of 80 unique protein-coding genes, 31 unique tRNA gene, four unique rRNA genes (5S rRNA, 4.5S rRNA, 16S rRNA, and 23S rRNA), and five pseudogenes. The overall G/C content in the plastome of Mallotus japonicus is 40.2%. The phylogenetic analysis indicates that M. japonicus is closer to M. peltatus than other species in this study. The complete plastome sequence is conducive to the exploitation and utilization of Euphorbiaceae resources and the phylogenetic study in future.The full mitogenome of an ethanol-preserved museum specimen of Ceramaster japonicus was determined using the NGS Illumina MiSeq platform. The specimen was collected from Tosa Bay, Japan, facing the Pacific Ocean (33.0781 N 134.0601 E), at 700 m depth in 2011. The mitogenome shows a typical metazoan genomic structure, with all of the 37 genes included in its 16,370 base-long mitogenome. We conducted phylogenetic analyses using a data set including 18 publicly available asteroids rooted against five ophiuroids as outgroups. The result confirms the position of C. japonicus in the order Valvatida. The complete mitogenome of C. japonicus reported here is the first reported for the family Goniasteridae Forbes, 1841.
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