Abstract

BackgroundFreshwater unionoidean bivalves, and species representing two marine bivalve orders (Mytiloida and Veneroida), exhibit a mode of mtDNA inheritance involving distinct maternal (F) and paternal (M) transmission routes concomitant with highly divergent gender-associated mtDNA genomes. Additionally, male unionoidean bivalves have a ~550 bp 3' coding extension to the cox2 gene (Mcox2e), that is apparently absent from all other metazoan taxa.ResultsOur molecular sequence analyses of MCOX2e indicate that both the primary and secondary structures of the MCOX2e region are evolving much faster than other regions of the F and M COX2-COX1 gene junction. The near N-terminus ~2/3 of the MCOX2e region contains an interspecifically variable number of predicted transmembrane helices (TMH) and interhelical loops (IHL) whereas the C-terminus ~1/3 is relatively conserved and hydrophilic while containing conserved functional motifs. MCOX2e displays an overall pattern of purifying selection that leads to the preservation of TMH/IHL and C-terminus tail sub-regions. However, 14 amino acid positions in the MCOX2e TMH/IHL sub-region might be targeted by diversifying selection, each representing a site where there exists interspecific variation for the constituent amino acids residing in a TMH or IHL.ConclusionOur results indicate that Mcox2e is unique to unionoidean bivalves, likely the result of a single insertion event that took place over 65 MYA and that MCOX2e is functional. The predicted TMH number, length and position variability likely stems from substitution-based processes rather than the typically implicated insertion/deletion events. MCOX2e has relatively high rates of primary and secondary structure evolution, with some amino acid residues potentially subjected to site-specific positive selection, yet an overall pattern of purifying selection leading to the preservation of the TMH/IHL and hydrophilic C-terminus tail subregions. The more conserved C-terminus tail (relative to the TMH/IHL sub-region of MCOX2e) is likely biologically active because it contains functional motifs. The rapid evolution of primary and secondary structure in MCOX2e, combined with the action of both positive and purifying selection, provide supporting evidence for the hypothesis that MCOX2e has a novel reproductive function within unionoidean bivalves. All tolled, our data indicate that unionoidean bivalve MCOX2 is the first reported chimeric animal mtDNA-encoded protein.

Highlights

  • Freshwater unionoidean bivalves, and species representing two marine bivalve orders (Mytiloida and Veneroida), exhibit a mode of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) inheritance involving distinct maternal (F) and paternal (M) transmission routes concomitant with highly divergent gender-associated mtDNA genomes

  • Our molecular sequence analyses of the MCOX2 extension (MCOX2e) region indicate (1) relatively high rates of primary and secondary structure evolution, (2) potential instances of site-specific positive selection and (3) an overall pattern of purifying selection leading to the preservation of the Transmembrane helix (TMH)/interhelical loops (IHL) and C-terminus tail subregions of MCOX2e

  • In the 21 bivalve species examined, we obtained comparable sequences of the following lengths: 672 bp of Fcox1, 279 bp of Fcox2, 651 bp of Mcox1, and 279 bp of Mcox2h

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Summary

Introduction

Freshwater unionoidean bivalves, and species representing two marine bivalve orders (Mytiloida and Veneroida), exhibit a mode of mtDNA inheritance involving distinct maternal (F) and paternal (M) transmission routes concomitant with highly divergent gender-associated mtDNA genomes. Unique among the mtDNA-encoded COX subunits, COX2 has two N-terminus TMHs embedded in the inner mitochondrial membrane while the C-terminus half of the protein, containing the CuA center catalytic site, is located in the intermembrane space. These two distinct regions of COX2 are referred to as the COX2_TM and COX2 Pfam domains, respectively. The typically conserved pattern of COX2 domains is violated in one category of animal mitochondrial genomes, namely those paternally transmitted in unionoidean bivalves

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