“…However, even among angiosperms that remain fully photosynthetic, there have been repeated accelerations in rates of plastid gene evolution (Jansen et al, 2007;Guisinger et al, 2008;Knox, 2014;Sloan, Triant, Forrester, et al, 2014;Dugas et al, 2015;Nevill et al, 2019;Shrestha et al, 2019). These accelerations in angiosperms that retain a photosynthetic lifestyle can be highly gene-specific (Magee et al, 2010) and are often most pronounced in non-photosynthetic genes, such as those that encode ribosomal proteins, RNA polymerase subunits, the plastid caseinolytic protease (Clp) subunit ClpP1, the acetyl-CoA carboxylase (ACCase) subunit AccD, and the essential chloroplast factors Ycf1 and Ycf2 (Guisinger et al, 2008;Sloan, Triant, Forrester, et al, 2014;Seongjun Park et al, 2017;Shrestha et al, 2019). Accelerated protein sequence evolution has frequently been accompanied by other forms of plastome instability, including structural rearrangements and gene duplication (Guisinger et al, 2011;Knox, 2014;Sloan, Triant, Forrester, et al, 2014;Shrestha et al, 2019) as well as accelerated mitochondrial genome evolution in some cases (Cho et al, 2004;Parkinson et al, 2005;Jansen et al, 2007;Mower et al, 2007;Sloan et al, 2009;Seongjun Park et al, 2017).…”