New mitogenomes from the genus Cricotopus (Diptera: Chironomidae, Orthocladiinae): Characterization and phylogenetic implications

Cricotopus is a large and diverse genus of non‐biting midges composed of several subgenera. Complete mitogenome sequences are available for very few Cricotopus species. The subgenus Pseudocricotopus unites species with unusual morphological structures in adult male and pupal stages, however, molecul...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Published inArchives of insect biochemistry and physiology Vol. 115; no. 1; pp. e22067 - n/a
Main Authors Li, Shu‐Yi, Chen, Meng‐Han, Sun, Li, Wang, Rui‐Hao, Li, Chen‐Hong, Gresens, Susan, Li, Zhao, Lin, Xiao‐Long
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Wiley Subscription Services, Inc 01.01.2024
Subjects
Online AccessGet full text

Cover

Loading…
More Information
Summary:Cricotopus is a large and diverse genus of non‐biting midges composed of several subgenera. Complete mitogenome sequences are available for very few Cricotopus species. The subgenus Pseudocricotopus unites species with unusual morphological structures in adult male and pupal stages, however, molecular methods are needed to verify the placement of this subgenus within Cricotopus. We obtained mitogenomes of C. (Pseudocricotopus) cf. montanus and nine other Cricotopus species for phylogenetic analysis, coupled with two Rheocricotopus species and one Synorthocladius species as outgroups. The structure of the mitogenome was similar among these Cricotopus species, exhibiting A+T bias and retaining ancestral gene order. Mutation rate, estimated as Ka/Ks, varied among genes, and was highest for ATP8 and lowest for COI. The phylogenetic relationships among species of Cricotopus, Rheocricotopus and Synorthocladius was reconstructed using Bayesian inference and maximum likelihood estimation. The phylogenetic trees confirmed placement of subgenus Pseudocricotopus, represented by Cricotopus cf. montanus, within Cricotopus. Our study increases the library of chironomid mitogenomes and provides insight into the properties of their constituent genes. We have sequenced new mitogenomes for nine Cricotopus species, one Rheocricotopus species and one Synorthocladius species. Phylogenies showed that the subgenus Pseudocricotopus does belong within the genus Cricotopus. Research highlights We sequenced new mitogenomes for nine Cricotopus species, one Rheocricotopus species and one Synorthocladius species. Comparative analysis of mitogenome structure showed that nucleotide composition and gene order of these Cricotopus mitogenome were conservative. Phylogenies showed that the subgenus Pseudocricotopus does belong within the genus Cricotopus.
Bibliography:ObjectType-Article-1
SourceType-Scholarly Journals-1
ObjectType-Feature-2
content type line 14
content type line 23
ISSN:0739-4462
1520-6327
1520-6327
DOI:10.1002/arch.22067