Abstract: Microsatellites are abundant across prokaryotic and eukaryotic
genomes. However, comparative analysis of microsatellites in the organellar
genomes of plants and their utility in understanding phylogeny has not been
reported. The purpose of this study was to understand the organization of
microsatellites in the coding and non-coding regions of organellar genomes of
major cereals viz., rice, wheat, maize and sorghum. About 5.8–14.3% of
mitochondrial and 30.5–43.2% of chloroplast microsatellites were observed
in the coding regions. About 83.8–86.8% of known mitochondrial genes had at
least one microsatellite while this value ranged from 78.6–82.9% among the
chloroplast genomes. Dinucleotide repeats were the most abundant in the coding
and non-coding regions of the mitochondrial genome while mononucleotides were
predominant in chloroplast genomes. Maize harbored more repeats in the
mitochondrial genome, which could be due to the larger size of genome. A
phylogenetic analysis based on mitochondrial and chloroplast genomic
microsatellites revealed that rice and sorghum were closer to each other, while
wheat was the farthest and this corroborated with the earlier reported
phylogenies based on nuclear genome co-linearity and chloroplast gene-based
analysis.