Drivers of interlineage variability in mitogenomic evolutionary rates in Platyhelminthes.

Heredity (Edinb)

State Key Laboratory of Herbage Improvement and Grassland Agro-Ecosystems, and College of Ecology, Lanzhou University, Lanzhou, 730000, China.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Studies on mitochondrial genome evolution show varying results, particularly in flatworms, which have the fastest-evolving mitogenomic sequences among bilaterians.
  • Researchers analyzed 223 flatworm species using phylogenetic models, finding that factors like thermic host environment and longevity had minimal effect on sequence evolution and genome size.
  • The study highlights that parasitism significantly explains branch length variability in flatworms, with free-living turbellaria evolving more quickly than parasitic Neodermata, suggesting the need to consider lineage-specific factors and the episodic nature of evolutionary changes in these analyses.

Article Abstract

Studies of forces driving interlineage variability in the evolutionary rates (both sequence and architecture) of mitochondrial genomes often produce contradictory results. Flatworms (Platyhelminthes) exhibit the fastest-evolving mitogenomic sequences among all bilaterian phyla. To test the effects of multiple factors previously associated with different aspects of mitogenomic evolution, we used mitogenomes of 223 flatworm species, phylogenetic multilevel regression models, and causal inference. Thermic host environment (endothermic vs. ectothermic) had nonsignificant impacts on both sequence evolution and mitogenomic size. Mitogenomic gene order rearrangements (GORR) were mostly positively correlated with mitogenomic size (R ≈ 20-30%). Longevity was not (negatively) correlated with sequence evolution in flatworms. The predominantly free-living "turbellaria" exhibited much shorter branches and faster-evolving mitogenomic architecture than parasitic Neodermata. As a result, "parasitism" had a strong explanatory power on the branch length variability (>90%), and there was a negative correlation between GORR and branch length. However, the stem branch of Neodermata comprised 63.6% of the total average branch length. This evolutionary period was also marked by a high rate of gene order rearrangements in the ancestral Neodermata. We discuss how this period of rapid evolution deep in the evolutionary history may have decoupled sequence evolution rates from longevity and GORR, and overestimated the explanatory power of "parasitism". This study shows that impacts of variables often vary across lineages, and stresses the importance accounting for the episodic nature of evolutionary patterns in studies of mitogenomic evolution.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11436680PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41437-024-00712-2DOI Listing

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