Abstract

Orthaga olivacea Warre (Lepidoptera: Pyralidae) is an important agricultural pest of camphor trees (Cinnamomum camphora). To further supplement the known genome-level features of related species, the complete mitochondrial genome of Orthaga olivacea is amplified, sequenced, annotated, analyzed, and compared with 58 other species of Lepidopteran. The complete sequence is 15,174 bp, containing 13 protein-coding genes (PCGs), 22 transfer RNA (tRNA) genes, 2 ribosomal RNA (rRNA) genes, and a putative control region. Base composition is biased toward adenine and thymine (79.02% A+T) and A+T skew are slightly negative. Twelve of the 13 PCGs use typical ATN start codons. The exception is cytochrome oxidase 1 (cox1) that utilizes a CGA initiation codon. Nine PCGs have standard termination codon (TAA); others have incomplete stop codons, a single T or TA nucleotide. All the tRNA genes have the typical clover-leaf secondary structure, except for trnS(AGN), in which dihydrouridine (DHU) arm fails to form a stable stem-loop structure. The A+T-rich region (293 bp) contains a typical Lepidopter motifs 'ATAGA' followed by a 17 bp poly-T stretch, and a microsatellite-like (AT)13 repeat. Codon usage analysis revealed that Asn, Ile, Leu2, Lys, Tyr and Phe were the most frequently used amino acids, while Cys was the least utilized. Phylogenetic analysis suggested that among sequenced lepidopteran mitochondrial genomes, Orthaga olivacea Warre was most closely related to Hypsopygia regina, and confirmed that Orthaga olivacea Warre belongs to the Pyralidae family.

Highlights

  • The insect mitochondrial DNA is a closed-circular molecule ranging in size from 14,000 to 19,000 bp [1]

  • The complete mitogenome of Orthaga olivacea Warre is a circular molecule with 15,174 base pairs in size (Fig 1)

  • This is comparable to the mitogenome sizes documented for other sequenced lepidopterans which range from 14,535 bp in Ostrinia nubilalis to 16,179 bp in Plutella xylostella, and it is similar to Lista haraldusalis (15213) (Table 2)

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Summary

Introduction

The insect mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) is a closed-circular molecule ranging in size from 14,000 to 19,000 bp [1]. It generally contains 37 genes, of which seven are NADH dehydrogenase subunits (nad1-nad and nad4L), three cytochrome C oxidase subunits (cox1-cox3), two ATPase subunits (atp and atp8), one cytochrome b (cytb) subunit, two ribosomal RNAs The complete mitochondrial genome of Orthaga olivacea Warre (Lepidoptera Pyralidae)

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