A tale of two paths: The evolution of mitochondrial recombination in bivalves with doubly uniparental inheritance

Author:

Smith Chase H1ORCID,Pinto Brendan J23ORCID,Kirkpatrick Mark1ORCID,Hillis David M1ORCID,Pfeiffer John M41ORCID,Havird Justin C1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Texas , Austin, TX , United States

2. Center for Evolutionary Medicine & Public Health, Arizona State University , Tempe, AZ , United States

3. Department of Zoology, Milwaukee Public Museum , Milwaukee, WI , United States

4. ational Museum of Natural History, Smithsonian Institution Department of Invertebrate Zoology, N , Washington, DC , United States

Abstract

Abstract In most animals, mitochondrial DNA is strictly maternally inherited and non-recombining. One exception to this pattern is called doubly uniparental inheritance (DUI), a phenomenon involving the independent transmission of female and male mitochondrial genomes. DUI is known only from the molluskan class Bivalvia. The phylogenetic distribution of male-transmitted mitochondrial DNA (M mtDNA) in bivalves is consistent with several evolutionary scenarios, including multiple independent gains, losses, and varying degrees of recombination with female-transmitted mitochondrial DNA (F mtDNA). In this study, we use phylogenetic methods to test M mtDNA origination hypotheses and infer the prevalence of mitochondrial recombination in bivalves with DUI. Phylogenetic modeling using site concordance factors supported a single origin of M mtDNA in bivalves coupled with recombination acting over long evolutionary timescales. Ongoing mitochondrial recombination is present in Mytilida and Venerida, which results in a pattern of concerted evolution of F mtDNA and M mtDNA. Mitochondrial recombination could be favored to offset the deleterious effects of asexual inheritance and maintain mitonuclear compatibility across tissues. Cardiida and Unionida have gone without recent recombination, possibly due to an extension of the COX2 gene in male mitochondrial DNA. The loss of recombination could be connected to the role of M mtDNA in sex determination or sexual development. Our results support that recombination events may occur throughout the mitochondrial genomes of DUI species. Future investigations may reveal more complex patterns of inheritance of recombinants, which could explain the retention of signal for a single origination of M mtDNA in protein-coding genes.

Funder

NIH

University of Texas at Austin

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics (clinical),Genetics,Molecular Biology,Biotechnology

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