BMC Ecology and Evolution (Oct 2024)

Complementing aculiferan mitogenomics: comparative characterization of mitochondrial genomes of Solenogastres (Mollusca, Aplacophora)

  • Franziska S. Bergmeier,
  • Andreas Brachmann,
  • Kevin M. Kocot,
  • Francesca Leasi,
  • Albert J. Poustka,
  • Michael Schrödl,
  • Joseph L. Sevigny,
  • W. Kelley Thomas,
  • Christiane Todt,
  • Katharina M. Jörger

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12862-024-02311-5
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 24, no. 1
pp. 1 – 14

Abstract

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Abstract Background With the advances in high-throughput sequencing and bioinformatic pipelines, mitochondrial genomes have become increasingly popular for phylogenetic analyses across different clades of invertebrates. Despite the vast rise in available mitogenomic datasets of molluscs, one class of aplacophoran molluscs – Solenogastres (or Neomeniomorpha) – is still neglected. Results Here, we present six new mitochondrial genomes from five families of Solenogastres (Amphimeniidae, Gymnomeniidae, Proneomeniidae, Pruvotinidae, Simrothiellidae), including the first complete mitogenomes, thereby now representing three of the four traditional orders. Solenogaster mitogenomes are variable in size (ranging from approximately 15,000 bp to over 17,000 bp). The gene order of the 13 protein coding genes and two rRNA genes is conserved in three blocks, but considerable variation occurs in the order of the 22 tRNA genes. Based on phylogenetic analyses and reconstruction of ancestral mitochondrial genomes of Aculifera, the position of (1) trnD gene between atp8 and atp6, (2) trnT and P genes between atp6 and nad5, and (3) trnL1 gene between G and E, resulting in a ‘MCYWQGL1E’-block of tRNA genes, are all three considered synapomorphies for Solenogastres. The tRNA gene block ‘KARNI’ present in Polyplacophora and several conchiferan taxa is dissolved in Solenogastres. Conclusion Our study shows that mitogenomes are suitable to resolve the phylogenetic relationships among Aculifera and within Solenogastres, thus presenting a cost and time efficient compromise to approach evolutionary history in these clades.

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