Abstract

BackgroundA single circular mitochondrial (mt) genome is a common feature across most metazoans. The mt-genome includes protein-coding genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation, as well as RNAs necessary for translation of mt-RNAs, whose order and number are highly conserved across animal clades, with few known exceptions of alternative mt-gene order or mt-genome architectures. One such exception consists of the fragmented mitochondrial genome, a type of genome architecture where mt-genes are split across two or more mt-chromosomes. However, the origins of mt-genome fragmentation and its effects on mt-genome evolution are unknown. Here, we investigate these origin and potential mechanisms underlying mt-genome fragmentation, focusing on a genus of booklice, Liposcelis, which exhibits elevated sequence divergence, frequent rearrangement of mt-gene order, and fragmentation of the mt genome, and compare them to other Metazoan clades.ResultsWe found this genus Liposcelis exhibits very low conservation of mt-gene order across species, relative to other metazoans. Levels of gene order rearrangement were, however, unrelated to whether or not mt-genomes were fragmented or intact, suggesting mitochondrial genome fragmentation is not affecting mt-gene order directly. We further investigated possible mechanisms underpinning these patterns and revealed very high conservation of non-coding sequences at the edges of multiple recombination regions across populations of one particular Liposcelis species, supportive of a hypothesis that mt-fragmentation arises from recombination errors between mt-genome copies. We propose these errors may arise as a consequence of a heightened mutation rate in clades exhibiting mt-fragmentation. Consistent with this, we observed a striking pattern across three Metazoan phyla (Arthropoda, Nematoda, Cnidaria) characterised by members exhibiting high levels of mt-gene order rearrangement and cases of mt-fragmentation, whereby the mt-genomes of species more closely related to species with fragmented mt-genomes diverge more rapidly despite experiencing strong purifying selection.ConclusionsWe showed that contrary to expectations, mt-genome fragmentation is not correlated with the increase in mt-genome rearrangements. Furthermore, we present evidence that fragmentation of the mt-genome may be part of a general relaxation of a natural selection on the mt-genome, thus providing new insights into the origins of mt-genome fragmentation and evolution.

Highlights

  • A single circular mitochondrial genome is a common feature across most metazoans

  • We showed that contrary to expectations, mt-genome fragmentation is not correlated with the increase in mt-genome rearrangements

  • We present evidence that fragmentation of the mt-genome may be part of a general relaxation of a natural selection on the mt-genome, providing new insights into the origins of mt-genome fragmentation and evolution

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Summary

Introduction

A single circular mitochondrial (mt) genome is a common feature across most metazoans. The mtgenome includes protein-coding genes involved in oxidative phosphorylation, as well as RNAs necessary for translation of mt-RNAs, whose order and number are highly conserved across animal clades, with few known exceptions of alternative mt-gene order or mt-genome architectures. The mitochondrial genome (mt-genome) usually exists as a small circular chromosome in bilaterians (~ 16 kb length) that harbours only a few protein-coding genes necessary for OXPHOS and the RNAs necessary for the translation of mt-mRNAs [1, 2] The number of these genes found in the mtDNA sequence, and their order, are highly conserved across animals, making any occurrence of gene rearrangement among these genes useful for phylogenetic analysis [4]. The huge increase in the number of sequenced genomes across metazoan taxa over the past decade has brought to light some species exhibiting atypical mt-genomes, where neither mt-gene order nor the mt-genome architecture is conserved

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