Museomics allows comparative analyses of mitochondrial genomes in the family Gryllidae (Insecta, Orthoptera) and confirms its phylogenetic relationships.

PeerJ

Institut de Systématique, Evolution et Biodiversité (ISYEB), Muséum national d'Histoire naturelle, CNRS, SU, EPHE-SPL, UA, Paris, France.

Published: August 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • Next-generation sequencing, known as museomics, allows researchers to extract molecular data from historical specimens in museums, which are often underutilized despite their potential in resolving scientific inquiries.
  • This study utilized genome skimming to assemble three new complete cricket mitogenomes from both old (68 and 80 years old) and freshly collected specimens, enabling a comparison of their genetic makeup and phylogenetic relationships within the Gryllidae family.
  • The findings demonstrate that the genome skimming method is effective for obtaining complete mitogenomes from preserved specimens, highlighting its usefulness for extensive comparative analyses in natural history collections and supporting phylogenetic research.

Article Abstract

Background: Next-generation sequencing technology can now be used to sequence historical specimens from natural history collections, an approach referred to as museomics. The museomics allows obtaining molecular data from old museum-preserved specimens, a resource of biomolecules largely underexploited despite the fact that these specimens are often unique samples of nomenclatural types that can be crucial for resolving scientific questions. Despite recent technical progress, cricket mitogenomes are still scarce in the databases, with only a handful of new ones generated each year from freshly collected material.

Methods: In this study, we used the genome skimming method to sequence and assemble three new complete mitogenomes representing two tribes of the cricket subfamily Eneopterinae: two were obtained from old, historical type material of (68 years old) and (80 years old), the third one from a freshly collected specimen of . We compared their genome organization and base composition, and reconstructed the molecular phylogeny of the family Gryllidae.

Results: Our study not only confirmed that the genome skimming method used by next generation sequencing allows us to efficiently obtain the whole mitogenome from dry-pinned historical specimens, but we also confirmed how promising it is for large-scale comparative studies of mitogenomes using resources from natural history collections. Used in a phylogenetic context the new mitogenomes attest that the mitogenomic data contain valuable information and also strongly support phylogenetic relationships at multiple time scales.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11317039PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.17734DOI Listing

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