Quantification and evolution of mitochondrial genome rearrangement in Amphibians

Rearrangement is an important topic in the research of amphibian mitochondrial genomes ("mitogenomes" hereafter), whose causes and mechanisms remain enigmatic. Globally examining mitogenome rearrangements and uncovering their characteristics can contribute to a better understanding of mito...

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Veröffentlicht in:BMC ecology and evolution 2021-02, Vol.21 (1), p.19-19, Article 19
Hauptverfasser: Zhang, Jifeng, Miao, Guopen, Hu, Shunjie, Sun, Qi, Ding, Hengwu, Ji, Zhicheng, Guo, Pen, Yan, Shoubao, Wang, Chengrun, Kan, Xianzhao, Nie, Liuwang
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Rearrangement is an important topic in the research of amphibian mitochondrial genomes ("mitogenomes" hereafter), whose causes and mechanisms remain enigmatic. Globally examining mitogenome rearrangements and uncovering their characteristics can contribute to a better understanding of mitogenome evolution. Here we systematically investigated mitogenome arrangements of 232 amphibians including four newly sequenced Dicroglossidae mitogenomes. The results showed that our new sequenced mitogenomes all possessed a trnM tandem duplication, which was not exclusive to Dicroglossidae. By merging the same arrangements, the mitogenomes of ~ 80% species belonged to the four major patterns, the major two of which were typical vertebrate arrangement and typical neobatrachian arrangement. Using qMGR for calculating rearrangement frequency (RF) (%), we found that the control region (CR) (RF = 45.04) and trnL2 (RF = 38.79) were the two most frequently rearranged components. Forty-seven point eight percentage of amphibians possessed rearranged mitogenomes including all neobatrachians and their distribution was significantly clustered in the phylogenetic trees (p 
ISSN:2730-7182
2730-7182
DOI:10.1186/s12862-021-01755-3