Clupeoid fish can be considered excellent candidates to understand the role of mitochondrial DNA in adaptive evolution, as they have colonized different habitats (marine, brackish, freshwater, tropical and temperate regions) over millions of years. Here, we investigate patterns of tRNA location, codon usage bias, and lineage-specific diversifying selection signals to provide novel insights into how evolutionary improvements of mitochondrial metabolic efficiency have allowed clupeids to adapt to different habitats. Based on whole mitogenome data of 70 Clupeoids with a global distribution we find that purifying selection was the dominant force acting and that the mutational deamination pressure in mtDNA was stronger than the codon/amino acid constraints. The codon usage pattern appears evolved to achieve high translational efficiency (codon/amino acid-related constraints), as indicated by the complementarity of most codons to the GT-saturated tRNA anticodon sites (retained by deamination-induced pressure) and usage of the codons of the tRNA genes situated near to the control region (fixed by deamination pressure) where transcription efficiency was high. The observed shift in codon preference patterns between marine and euryhaline/freshwater Clupeoids indicates possible selection for improved translational efficiency in mitochondrial genes while adapting to low-salinity habitats. This mitogenomic plasticity and enhanced efficiency of the metabolic machinery may have contributed to the evolutionary success and abundance of Clupeoid fish.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41437-022-00519-z | DOI Listing |
Gen Comp Endocrinol
February 2024
Fisheries Technology Institute, Hakatajima Field Station, Japan Fisheries Research and Education Agency, Imabari 794-2305, Japan.
17β-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenases (Hsd17bs) play a critical role in sex steroid biosynthesis. Although multiple types of Hsd17b have been found in fish, there is limited research on their expression and function. Recently, we succeeded in identifying eight types of Hsd17b (types 3, 4, 7, 8, 10, 12a, 12b, and 14) by RNA sequencing in the Japanese sardine Sardinops melanostictus, a commercially important clupeoid fish; however, a homologous sequence of Hsd17b1, which catalyzes the key reaction of estradiol-17β (E2) synthesis, was absent.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFHeredity (Edinb)
April 2022
ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Ernakulam North P.O., Kochi, Kerala, 682018, India.
Clupeoid fish can be considered excellent candidates to understand the role of mitochondrial DNA in adaptive evolution, as they have colonized different habitats (marine, brackish, freshwater, tropical and temperate regions) over millions of years. Here, we investigate patterns of tRNA location, codon usage bias, and lineage-specific diversifying selection signals to provide novel insights into how evolutionary improvements of mitochondrial metabolic efficiency have allowed clupeids to adapt to different habitats. Based on whole mitogenome data of 70 Clupeoids with a global distribution we find that purifying selection was the dominant force acting and that the mutational deamination pressure in mtDNA was stronger than the codon/amino acid constraints.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Fish Biol
May 2022
Laboratory of Ichthyology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
The Balbiani body (Bb) was examined in primary growth phase oocytes for the first time in two clupeoid fish species, the Mediterranean sardine, Sardina pilchardus, and the European anchovy, Engraulis encrasicolus, which belong to different families, Clupeidae and Engraulidae, respectively. Cytoplasmic morphological changes of early secondary growth oocytes were also investigated using confocal laser scanning microscopy, light and transmission electron microscopy. The ultrastructural observations showed that the two species develop a distinct spherical Bb.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFJ Morphol
April 2022
Laboratory of Ichthyology, School of Biology, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Thessaloniki, Greece.
The ultrastructure of oocyte mitochondria and their contribution to the endogenous autosynthesis of the yolk was investigated in two clupeoid species, the Mediterranean sardine, Sardina pilchardus, and the European anchovy, Engraulis encrasicolus. The structure and abundance of mitochondria differ in secondary growth oocytes of the two species, whereas they are similar in chromatin nucleolus and primary growth oocytes. Sardine oocytes show a higher percentage of mitochondria in the cytoplasm as they develop.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenetica
June 2021
ICAR-Central Marine Fisheries Research Institute, Ernakulam North P.O, Kochi, 682018, Kerala, India.
The vertebrate mitochondrial genome is characterized by an exceptional organization evolving towards a reduced size. However, the persistence of a non-coding and highly variable control region is against this evolutionary trend that is explained by the presence of conserved sequence motifs or binding sites for nuclear-organized proteins that regulate mtDNA maintenance and expression. We performed a comparative mitogenomic investigation of the non-coding control region to understand its evolutionary patterns in Clupeoid fishes which are widely distributed across oceans of the world, exhibiting exemplary evolutionary potential.
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