Evolutionary history of inversions in directional mutational pressures in crustacean mitochondrial genomes: Implications for evolutionary studies
Copepoda
Base Composition
0303 health sciences
03 medical and health sciences
Genome, Mitochondrial
Animals
Biological Evolution
Phylogeny
Isopoda
DOI:
10.1016/j.ympev.2021.107288
Publication Date:
2021-08-05T15:58:35Z
AUTHORS (6)
ABSTRACT
Inversions of the origin of replication (ORI) in mitochondrial genomes produce asymmetrical mutational pressures that can cause strong base composition skews. Due to skews often being overlooked, the total number of crustacean lineages that underwent ORI events remains unknown. We analysed skews, cumulative skew plots, conserved sequence motifs, and mitochondrial architecture of all 965 available crustacean mitogenomes (699 unique species). We found indications of an ORI in 159 (22.7%) species, and mapped these to 23 ORI events: 16 identified with confidence and 7 putative (13 newly proposed, and for 5 we improved the resolution). Two ORIs occurred at or above the order level: Isopoda and Copepoda. Shifts in skew plots are not a precise tool for identifying the replication mechanism. We discuss how ORIs can produce mutational bursts in mitogenomes and show how these can interfere with various types of evolutionary studies. Phylogenetic analyses were plagued by artefactual clustering, and ORI lineages exhibited longer branches, a higher number of synonymous substitutions, higher mutational saturation, and higher compositional heterogeneity. ORI events also affected codon usage and protein properties. We discuss how this may have caused erroneous interpretation of data in previous studies that did not account for skew patterns.
SUPPLEMENTAL MATERIAL
Coming soon ....
REFERENCES (99)
CITATIONS (23)
EXTERNAL LINKS
PlumX Metrics
RECOMMENDATIONS
FAIR ASSESSMENT
Coming soon ....
JUPYTER LAB
Coming soon ....