MarketList of sequenced plastomes
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List of sequenced plastomes

A plastome is the genome of a plastid, a type of organelle found in plants and in a variety of protists. The number of known plastid genome sequences grew rapidly in the first decade of the twenty-first century. For example, 25 chloroplast genomes were sequenced for one molecular phylogenetic study.

Plants
Bryophytes s.l. Ferns and lycophytes Gymnosperms Flowering plants This sortable table is expected to compile complete plastid genomes representing the largest range of sizes, number of genes, and angiosperm families. ==Green algae==
Glaucophytes
==Meta-algae and apicomplexans==
Meta-algae and apicomplexans
Meta-algae are organisms with photosynthetic organelles of secondary or tertiary endosymbiotic origin, and their close non-photosynthetic, plastid-bearing, relatives. Apicomplexans are a secondarily non-photosynthetic group of chromalveoates which retain a reduced plastid organelle. Photosynthetic chromalveolates Dinoflagellate plastid genomes are not organised into a single circular DNA molecule like other plastid genomes, but into an array of mini-circles. Chlorarachniophytes ===Euglenophytes=== Apicomplexans ==Nucleomorph genomes==
Nucleomorph genomes
In some photosynthetic organisms, that ability was acquired via symbiosis with a unicellular green alga (chlorophyte) or red alga (rhodophyte). In some such cases, not only does the chloroplast of the former unicellular alga retain its own genome, but a remnant of the alga is also retained. When this retains a nucleus and a nuclear genome, it is termed a nucleomorph. ==Cyanelle genomes==
Cyanelle genomes
The unicellular eukaryote Paulinella chromatophora possesses an organelle (the cyanelle) which represents an independent case of the acquisition of photosynthesis by cyanobacterial endosymbiosis. (Note: the term "cyanelle" is also applied to the plastids of glaucophytes.) == See also ==
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