Evolution and codon usage bias of mitochondrial and nuclear genomes inAspergillussectionFlavi

Author:

Hugaboom Miya1ORCID,Hatmaker Elizabeth Anne12ORCID,LaBella Abigail L3ORCID,Rokas Antonis12ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Biological Sciences, Vanderbilt University , Nashville, TN 37235 , USA

2. Evolutionary Studies Initiative, Vanderbilt University , Nashville, TN 37235 , USA

3. Department of Bioinformatics and Genomics, University of North Carolina at Charlotte , Charlotte, NC 28223 , USA

Abstract

AbstractThe fungal genus Aspergillus contains a diversity of species divided into taxonomic sections of closely related species. Section Flavi contains 33 species, many of industrial, agricultural, or medical relevance. Here, we analyze the mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomes) of 20 Flavi species—including 18 newly assembled mitogenomes—and compare their evolutionary history and codon usage bias patterns to their nuclear counterparts. Codon usage bias refers to variable frequencies of synonymous codons in coding DNA and is shaped by a balance of neutral processes and natural selection. All mitogenomes were circular DNA molecules with highly conserved gene content and order. As expected, genomic content, including GC content, and genome size differed greatly between mitochondrial and nuclear genomes. Phylogenetic analysis based on 14 concatenated mitochondrial genes predicted evolutionary relationships largely consistent with those predicted by a phylogeny constructed from 2,422 nuclear genes. Comparing similarities in interspecies patterns of codon usage bias between mitochondrial and nuclear genomes showed that species grouped differently by patterns of codon usage bias depending on whether analyses were performed using mitochondrial or nuclear relative synonymous usage values. We found that patterns of codon usage bias at gene level are more similar between mitogenomes of different species than the mitogenome and nuclear genome of the same species. Finally, we inferred that, although most genes—both nuclear and mitochondrial—deviated from the neutral expectation for codon usage, mitogenomes were not under translational selection while nuclear genomes were under moderate translational selection. These results contribute to the study of mitochondrial genome evolution in filamentous fungi.

Funder

Vanderbilt Data Science Institute Summer Research Program

National Institutes of Health/National Eye Institute

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology

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