Complete Chloroplast Genome of Acroptilon repens, 152,574 Base Pairs
by Wenwen Liu·Updated 2mo ago
10.0 MB6files
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Description
152,574 base pairs comprise the complete chloroplast genome of the plant species Acroptilon repens, assembled and annotated by Wenwen Liu. The genome includes 35 tRNA genes, 8 rRNA genes, and 85 protein-coding genes, with 18 genes containing one intron and two genes possessing two introns. This resource, shared under a CC-BY-4.0 license on figshare in April 2026, supports studies on taxonomy, evolution, and biogeography within the Asteraceae family.
Use Cases
Conducting phylogenetic analysis based on the complete chloroplast genome sequence.
Studying gene structure and intron patterns within plant chloroplasts.
Investigating taxonomic relationships within the Asteraceae family, specifically tribe Cardueae.
Performing comparative genomics using the annotated tRNA, rRNA, and protein-coding genes.
Strengths
The complete chloroplast genome is 152,574 base pairs in length, a specific and verifiable size.
Contains a detailed annotation of 35 tRNA, 8 rRNA, and 85 protein-coding genes.
Includes phylogenetic analysis that clusters the species with related members of tribe Cardueae.
Limitations
Column-level documentation is absent; field semantics must be inferred after download.
Row count is unknown, which may limit suitability assessment.
Data files are in TIF and DOCX formats, which may require specific tools for genomic analysis.
Provenance
Source
Wenwen Liu, via figshare.
Collection Method
Assembled and annotated from genetic sequencing data.
Time Range
Publication date suggests a 2026 study, but the temporal coverage of the source material is unknown.
Freshness
Last updated 2026-04-20 07:31:18; freshness should be verified.
Geography
The ecological description mentions steppe and desert-steppe communities, but the specific geographic origin of the sampled plant is unknown.
Primary data files are in TIF and DOCX formats, not standard bioinformatics formats like FASTA or GenBank; conversion may be needed for analysis.