During eukaryotes evolution, mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) fragments integrate into nuclear genomes, forming nuclear mitochondrial DNA sequences (Numts). Tortricidae (Lepidoptera), a species-rich and economically critical family, lacks systematic characterization of Numts, which hinders reliable molecular research. Here, we systematically characterized Numts in 27 Tortricidae species spanning two subfamilies via genome download, mitochondrial genome annotation, and Numt identification and characterization. With each species’ mtDNA as query, Numt identification was performed with an E-value threshold of 10−4 and a sequence similarity cut-off of >60%, with a minimum length of 50 bp to exclude spurious hits. Results showed that all species contained Numts, with copy numbers varying drastically (9–208). Numt numbers positively correlated with nuclear genome length, but not mitochondrial genome length. Numts insertion flanking regions had significantly higher AT content than nuclear genome, indicating the insertion preference for AT-rich regions. Numts were predominantly derived from the mitochondrial cox1 gene, highlighting the risk of co-amplification when cox1 is used as a DNA barcode for species identification or phylogenetic studies. This study represents a systematic charaterizition of copy number, length distribution, insertion sequence preferences, and mitochondrial gene origins of Numts in Tortricidae, offering valuable references for refining molecular systematics, comparative genomics, and pest management in Tortricidae and related lepidopteran groups.
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Weifeng Peng
Zhoukou Normal University
Jiayi Yu
Sichuan University
Z. L Wang
Zhoukou Normal University
Biology
Zhoukou Normal University
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Peng et al. (Mon,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69c37b41b34aaaeb1a67d72a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.3390/biology15060517