4.6 Article

Comparative Mitogenomics in Hyalella (Amphipoda: Crustacea)

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12020292

Keywords

compensatory mutation; tRNA secondary structure; selection; Hyalella; crustaceans

Funding

  1. Spanish MINECO - Agencia Espanola de Investigacion (AEI) [CGL2016-76164-P]
  2. European Regional Development Fund (FEDER)
  3. Spanish Ministerio de Ciencia, Innovacion y Universidades [BES-2017-081069]

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The study conducted sequencing and comparative analysis on 17 mitochondrial genomes of Hyalella amphipods, revealing gene rearrangement between North and South American populations, as well as the AT-richness and strong nucleotide bias in the genomes. Additionally, the study found a preference for AT-rich codons in the protein-coding sequences and identified numerous base changes in tRNA.
We present the sequencing and comparative analysis of 17 mitochondrial genomes of Nearctic and Neotropical amphipods of the genus Hyalella, most from the Andean Altiplano. The mitogenomes obtained comprised the usual 37 gene-set of the metazoan mitochondrial genome showing a gene rearrangement (a reverse transposition and a reversal) between the North and South American Hyalella mitogenomes. Hyalella mitochondrial genomes show the typical AT-richness and strong nucleotide bias among codon sites and strands of pancrustaceans. Protein-coding sequences are biased towards AT-rich codons, with a preference for leucine and serine amino acids. Numerous base changes (539) were found in tRNA stems, with 103 classified as fully compensatory, 253 hemi-compensatory and the remaining base mismatches and indels. Most compensatory Watson-Crick switches were AU -> GC linked in the same haplotype, whereas most hemi-compensatory changes resulted in wobble GU and a few AC pairs. These results suggest a pairing fitness increase in tRNAs after crossing low fitness valleys. Branch-site level models detected positive selection for several amino acid positions in up to eight mitochondrial genes, with atp6 and nad5 as the genes displaying more sites under selection.

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