The complete mitochondrial genome of Xystrocera globosa is 15,706 bp in length, containing 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNAs, two ribosomal RNAs and the A þ T-rich region. The overall base composition is 72.7% AT and 27.3% GC, and the AT content of the control region is 79.3%. In ML and BI phylogenetic trees, X. globosa was a sister clade to X. grayii. The monophyly of Lamiinae and Prioninae were supported in ML analyses, but nevertheless, the monophyly of Cerambycinae was not recovered.
2019) The characteristics and phylogenetic relationship of two complete mitochondrial genomes of Matronabasilaris (Odonata: Zygoptera: Calopterygidae),
ABSTRACTThe relationship of Matrona and Atrocalopteryx (Odonata: Calopterygidae) is still unclear. To better understand the phylogenetic relationship of Matrona and Atrocalopteryx, we sequenced and annotated two complete mitochondrial genomes of Matrona basilaris sampled from two different locations. The length of the two complete mitochondrial genomes of M. basilaris is 16,149 bp and 15,893 bp for the specimens collected in Jinhua, Zhejiang Province and Tianmushan, Zhejiang Province, China, respectively. The two mitochondrial genomes include the typical invertebrate set of 37 genes: 13 protein-coding genes (PGCs), 22 tRNA genes, and 2 rRNA genes. The nucleotide composition of the mitogenome is similar to other odonates with high content of A þ T (68.9%) and all PCGs use ATN as the start codon. Tandem repeats were detected in the control regions of the two M. basilaris samples that accounted for the different sequence lengths of the mitochondrial genomes from the two locations. Finally, BI and ML phylogenetic analysis based on the concatenated nucleotide sequences of the 13 PCGs supported the conclusion that M. basilaris is a sister clade to Atrocalopteryx melli. ) and RAxML 8.2.0 (Stamatakis 2014), respectively. Both BI and ML phylogenetic trees showed that M. basilaris is a sister clade to Atrocalopteryx melli. However, the monophyly of Atrocalopteryx failed because M. basilaris is clustered into Atrocalopteryx.
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