Abstract

Mitochondrial genomes are essential components of eukaryotic cells, understanding their structural characteristics and codon usage bias is critical. Winter squash (Cucurbita maxima Duch ex Poiret) is an economically important cucurbit crop. To clarify its structural characteristics and codon usage bias of mitochondrial genome, as well as the evolutionary characteristics in the Cucurbitaceae family, whole genome sequencing analysis of C. maxima mitochondrial genome was carried out. The results revealed that the total length of the C. maxima mitochondrial genome was 640,814 bp, containing 9,162,318,300 bp of bases. There were 68 annotated genes identified. The mitochondrial coding genes of C. maxima exhibited an average GCall content of 42.57%, with the last position enriched in A/T bases. Codon usage analysis indicated weak codon bias, with the effective codon number (ENC) ranging from 44.22 to 61.00. Correlation analysis and neutrality plot analysis demonstrated a nonsignificant correlation between GC3 and GC12. PR2-plot and ENC-plot analysis further supported the influence of natural selection on the codon preference in the C. maxima mitochondrial genome. Relative synonymous codon usage (RSCU) analysis identified 19 optimal codons, with a preference for U or A as the final base. The analysis of scattered repeat sequences in the genome indicated a high frequency of forward and palindromic repeats in the C. maxima mitochondrial genome. Nucleic acid diversity analysis highlighted rpl5 as the gene with the highest variability. Comparative analysis of mitochondrial structure and phylogenetic tree analysis revealed a close evolutionary relationship between C. maxima and Cucurbita pepo, showing synteny in evolution. Homologous fragment analysis demonstrated a similarity of over 70% between the C. maxima mitochondrial genome and chloroplast genome fragments. These findings provide a foundation for C. maxima identification and phylogenetic studies.

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