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      Evidence for Adaptive Selection in the Mitogenome of a Mesoparasitic Monogenean Flatworm Enterogyrus malmbergi

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          Abstract

          Whereas a majority of monogenean flatworms are ectoparasitic, i.e., parasitize on external surfaces (mainly gills) of their fish hosts, Enterogyrus species (subfamily Ancyrocephalinae) are mesoparasitic, i.e., parasitize in the stomach of the host. As there are numerous drastic differences between these two environments (including lower oxygen availability), we hypothesized that this life-history innovation might have produced adaptive pressures on the energy metabolism, which is partially encoded by the mitochondrial genome (OXPHOS). To test this hypothesis, we sequenced mitochondrial genomes of two Ancyrocephalinae species: mesoparasitic E. malmbergi and ectoparasitic Ancyrocephalus mogurndae. The mitogenomic architecture of E. malmbergi is mostly standard for monogeneans, but that of A. mogurndae exhibits some unique features: missing trnL2 gene, very low AT content (60%), a non-canonical start codon of the nad2 gene, and exceptionally long tandem-repeats in the non-coding region (253 bp). Phylogenetic analyses produced paraphyletic Ancyrocephalinae (with embedded Dactylogyrinae), but with low support values. Selective pressure (PAML and HYPHY) and protein structure analyses all found evidence for adaptive evolution in cox2 and cox3 genes of the mesoparasitic E. malmbergi. These findings tentatively support our hypothesis of adaptive evolution driven by life-history innovations in the mitogenome of this species. However, as only one stomach-inhabiting mesoparasitic monogenean was available for this analysis, our findings should be corroborated on a larger number of mesoparasitic monogeneans and by physiological studies.

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            The PredictProtein server.

            PredictProtein (http://www.predictprotein.org) is an Internet service for sequence analysis and the prediction of protein structure and function. Users submit protein sequences or alignments; PredictProtein returns multiple sequence alignments, PROSITE sequence motifs, low-complexity regions (SEG), nuclear localization signals, regions lacking regular structure (NORS) and predictions of secondary structure, solvent accessibility, globular regions, transmembrane helices, coiled-coil regions, structural switch regions, disulfide-bonds, sub-cellular localization and functional annotations. Upon request fold recognition by prediction-based threading, CHOP domain assignments, predictions of transmembrane strands and inter-residue contacts are also available. For all services, users can submit their query either by electronic mail or interactively via the World Wide Web.
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              DNASTAR's Lasergene sequence analysis software.

              Lasergene's eight modules provide tools that enable users to accomplish each step of sequence analysis, from trimming and assembly of sequence data, to gene discovery, annotation, gene product analysis, sequence similarity searches, sequence alignment, phylogenetic analysis, oligonucleotide primer design, cloning strategies, and publication of the results. The Lasergene software suite provides the functions and customization tools needed so that users can perform analyses the software writers never imagined.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                Genes (Basel)
                Genes (Basel)
                genes
                Genes
                MDPI
                2073-4425
                30 October 2019
                November 2019
                : 10
                : 11
                : 863
                Affiliations
                [1 ]State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, China; dongzhang0725@ 123456gmail.com (D.Z.); zouhong@ 123456ihb.ac.cn (H.Z.); wusgz@ 123456ihb.ac.cn (S.G.W.); liming82101920@ 123456aliyun.com (M.L.); gtwang@ 123456ihb.ac.cn (G.T.W.)
                [2 ]Key Laboratory of Aquaculture Disease Control, Ministry of Agriculture, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, China
                [3 ]University of Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100000, China
                [4 ]Bio-Transduction Lab, Wuhan 430075, China; ivanjakovlic@ 123456yahoo.com (I.J.); zhangjin2001@ 123456163.com (J.Z.); chenrong2S@ 123456163.com (R.C.)
                Author notes
                [* ]Correspondence: liwx@ 123456ihb.ac.cn
                Author information
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0902-6704
                https://orcid.org/0000-0002-2461-3712
                Article
                genes-10-00863
                10.3390/genes10110863
                6896049
                31671638
                d30e003d-a092-48cc-a322-d221817c60d3
                © 2019 by the authors.

                Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license ( http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).

                History
                : 19 September 2019
                : 29 October 2019
                Categories
                Article

                ancyrocephalus mogurndae,positive selection,monogenea,dactylogyridae,flatworms,replication initiation,mtdna

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