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1.
Fig. 2

Fig. 2. From: The evolution of the plastid chromosome in land plants: gene content, gene order, gene function.

Synteny of land plant plastid chromosomes. The plastid chromosomes are shown in linearized form illustrating relative gene synteny. Genes are depicted by boxes colored according to their relevant functional class (see legend). Genes encoded by the leading strand (+ strand) or by the lagging strand (- strand) are shown above or below the grey chromosome bar, respectively. Lengths of boxes do not reflect lengths of genes, but are artificially increased to aid legibility (consequently, overlapping genes on ± strand do not indicate overlapping reading frames). Lines from selected genes/gene-regions mentioned above the first chromosome bar roughly indicate genes clusters that have been reorganizated during land plant evolution. Not all regions that underwent genomic relocations prior or during land plant evolution are depicted here. The chromosome bars are colored gray to highlight the positions of the two large Inverted Repeat regions (IRA/IRB) and are connected by gray lines between the different lineages. Gray lines are discontinued once to indicate loss of the large inverted repeat in Pinus. Drawn with GenomePixelizer (Kozik et al. ) using genome annotations deposited in public sequence databases. Refer to the text for genome references and original publications.]

Susann Wicke, et al. Plant Mol Biol. 2011;76(3):273-297.
2.
Fig. 1

Fig. 1. From: The evolution of the plastid chromosome in land plants: gene content, gene order, gene function.

Evolution of plastid gene content in land plants. Events of gene losses in Embryophytes, as well as gains and duplication of protein coding genes in green plant lineages are depicted along the branches/nodes of the Plant Tree of Life (Palmer et al. ; Qiu et al. ; Zhong et al. ). The putatively ancestral gene content, as reflected in Marchantia and derived from parsimony analysis after Maul et al. (), is given at the first land plant node. Gene losses during the evolution of land plants are indicated by red arrows (those occurring before the emergence of Embryophytes are not considered here); a green arrow indicates the evolution of a novel gene prior to the transition to land; blue arrows refer to gene duplications. Changes in the content of transfer RNAs are not considered here (refer to Gao et al. for review). A detailed summary of gene losses during the evolution of angiosperms is provided by Jansen et al. () and Magee et al. (). Although chl-subunits are still present in some gymnosperm plastomes, multiple losses and pseudogenizations indicate a functional transfer to the nuclear genome. As chl genes have been lost entirely from angiosperm plastomes, functional chl-gene transfer might have already occurred in a common ancestor

Susann Wicke, et al. Plant Mol Biol. 2011;76(3):273-297.

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