Abstract

The animal mitogenomes which undergone a reductive evolution has an obvious loss of coding capacity compared to their known closest relatives, but it has not yet been fully investigated why and how the intergenic regions do not encode protein and have no known functions, are stably maintained, replicated, and transmitted by the genome. These relatively small intergenic regions may not be under neutral evolution and they may have functional and/or regulatory roles that have yet to be identified. Here, the distribution pattern, sequence content and location of a novel sequence motif of ‘WWWGHTW’ were bioinformatically investigated and characterised by constructing a sampling mitogenome dataset of 1889 species from 14 phyla representing the clade of Bilateria. This motif is reverse complementary of the previously described DmTTF binding sequence and found in the nd4L- (X) -trnT gene cluster. This cluster commonly exhibits a strand displacement region and an intergenic region among the bilaterian superphylums, particularly in Ecdysozoa. This motif may be accepted as a substrate providing binding sites for the specific interaction with transcription factors because of (i) its reverse complementarity of previously described DmTTF binding sequence, and (ii) the possession of G and T nucleotides in the fourth and sixth positions, (iii) the bias on T and G nucleotides instead of C and A in the degenerated positions. This suggestion is also supported by the presence of a strand displacement region in the nd4L- (X) -trnT gene cluster, particularly in Ecdysozoa consisting of the most rearranged mitogenomes among the bilaterian superphylums.

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