The mitochondrial genomes of the Geometroidea (Lepidoptera) and their phylogenetic implications

Author:

Ding Weili1,Xu Haizhen2,Wu Zhipeng2,Hu Lizong2,Huang Li2,Yang Mingsheng2ORCID,Li Lili23

Affiliation:

1. Finance Office Zhoukou Normal University Zhoukou China

2. College of Life Science and Agronomy Zhoukou Normal University Zhoukou China

3. Key Laboratory of Plant Genetics and Molecular Breeding Zhoukou Normal University Zhoukou China

Abstract

AbstractThe Geometroidea is a large superfamily of Lepidoptera in species composition and contains numerous economically important pest species that cause great loss in crop and forest production. However, understanding of mitogenomes remains limited due to relatively fewer mitogenomes previously reported for this megadiverse group. Here, we sequenced and annotated nine mitogenomes for Geometridae and further analyzed the mitogenomic evolution and phylogeny of the whole superfamily. All nine mitogenomes contained 37 mitochondrial genes typical in insects, and gene organization was conserved except for Somatina indicataria. In S. indicataria, the positions of two tRNAs were rearranged. The trnR was located before trnA instead of after trnA typical in Lepidoptera, whereas the trnE was detected rarely on the minority strand (N‐strand). This trnRtrnAtrnNtrnS1trnEtrnF newly recognized in S. indicataria represents the first gene rearrangement reported for Geometroidea and is also unique in Lepidoptera. Besides, nucleotide composition analyses showed little heterogeneity among the four geometrid subfamilies involved herein, and overall, nad6 and atp8 have higher nucleotide diversity and Ka/Ks rate in Geometridae. In addition, the taxonomic assignments of the nine species, historically defined by morphological studies, were confirmed by various phylogenetic analyses based on the hitherto most extensive mitogenomic sampling in Geometroidea.

Funder

National Natural Science Foundation of China

Postdoctoral Science Foundation of Jiangsu Province

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Nature and Landscape Conservation,Ecology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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