Literature DB >> 34418213

Slow crabs - fast genomes: Locomotory capacity predicts skew magnitude in crustacean mitogenomes.

Ivan Jakovlić1, Hong Zou2, Jian-Hai Chen3, Hong-Peng Lei1, Gui-Tang Wang2, Jianquan Liu1, Dong Zhang1.   

Abstract

Base composition skews (G-C/G+C) of mitochondrial genomes are believed to be primarily driven by mutational pressure, which is positively correlated with metabolic rate. In marine animals, metabolic rate is also positively correlated with locomotory capacity. Given the central role of mitochondria in energy metabolism, we hypothesised that selection for locomotory capacity should be positively correlated with the strength of purifying selection (dN/dS), and thus be negatively correlated with the skew magnitude. Therefore, these two models assume diametrically opposite associations between the metabolic rate and skew magnitude: positive correlation in the prevailing paradigm, and negative in our working hypothesis. We examined correlations between the skew magnitude, metabolic rate, locomotory capacity, and several other variables previously associated with mitochondrial evolution on 287 crustacean mitogenomes. Weakly locomotory taxa had higher skew magnitude and ω (dN/dS) values, but not the gene order rearrangement rate. Skew and ω magnitudes were correlated. Multilevel regression analyses indicated that three competing variables, body size, gene order rearrangement rate, and effective population size, had negligible impacts on the skew magnitude. In most crustacean lineages selection for locomotory capacity appears to be the primary factor determining the skew magnitude. Contrary to the prevailing paradigm, this implies that adaptive selection outweighs nonadaptive selection (mutation pressure) in crustaceans. However, we found indications that effective population size (nonadaptive factor) may outweigh the impact of locomotory capacity in sessile crustaceans (Thecostraca). In conclusion, skew magnitude is a product of the interplay between adaptive and nonadaptive factors, the balance of which varies among lineages.
© 2021 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  adaptive evolution; base composition skew; dN/dS; metabolic rate; nonadaptive evolution; purifying selection

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34418213     DOI: 10.1111/mec.16138

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol        ISSN: 0962-1083            Impact factor:   6.185


  2 in total

1.  Mitochondrial phylogenomics of Acanthocephala: nucleotide alignments produce long-branch attraction artefacts.

Authors:  Jin-Wei Gao; Xi-Ping Yuan; Hao Wu; Chuan-Yu Xiang; Min Xie; Rui Song; Zhong-Yuan Chen; Yuan-An Wu; Dong-Sheng Ou
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2022-10-19       Impact factor: 4.047

2.  The complete mitochondrial genomes of Paradiplozoon yarkandense and Paradiplozoon homoion confirm that Diplozoidae evolve at an elevated rate.

Authors:  Cui-Lan Hao; Kadirden Arken; Munira Kadir; Wen-Run Zhang; Meng-Jie Rong; Nian-Wen Wei; Yan-Jun Liu; Cheng Yue
Journal:  Parasit Vectors       Date:  2022-04-27       Impact factor: 4.047

  2 in total

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