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Mitogenome Announcement

The complete mitochondrial genome of Mantis religiosa (Mantodea: Mantidae) from Canada and its phylogeny

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Pages 3797-3799 | Received 11 Sep 2019, Accepted 13 Oct 2019, Published online: 25 Oct 2019

Abstract

The complete mitochondrial genome of Mantis religiosa (Mantodea: Mantidae) from Canada was successfully sequenced. The mitochondrial genome was a circular molecule of 15,521 bp in length, containing 13 protein-coding genes, two rRNA genes, 23 tRNA genes (including an extra tRNAArg gene), and the control region. The AT content of the whole genome was 76.9% and the length of the control region was 636 bp with 81.9% AT content. The structure of the M. religiosa mitochondrial genome from Canada was almost identical to M. religiosa from China and their genetic distance was just 0.017. In Bayesian inference (BI) and maximum likelihood (ML) analyses, we found that M. religiosa was a sister clade to Statilia sp. and the monophyly of the genera Hierodula and Rhombodera was not supported.

Mantis religiosa (Mantodea: Mantidae), the European Mantis, is widely distributed across the world. The species occurs in China where it is characterized by an additional tRNA-Arg gene in the mitochondrial genome (Ye et al. Citation2016). It is listed as an introduced species in Canada (Kevan Citation1979; Miskelly and Paiero Citation2019). In this study, we sequenced the mitochondrial genome of M. religiosa from Canada to compare the gene structure with the Chinese counterpart and provide more molecular data to discuss the phylogenetic relationship within Mantidae.

The sample of M. religiosa was collected from Upper Canada Village (N 45°3′55″, E 74°56′34″), Morrisburg, Ontario, Canada. The sample (CA20170830-1) was identified and stored at −40 °C in the Animal Specimen Museum, College of Life Sciences and Chemistry, Zhejiang Normal University, China. Total genomic DNA was extracted from leg muscle using an Ezup Column Animal Genomic DNA Purification Kit (Sangon Biotech Company, Shanghai, China) and stored in the Zhang laboratory. A set of modified universal primers (Zhang et al. Citation2008; Zhang, Yu, et al. Citation2018) were designed for polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification. All PCR products were sequenced in both directions by the Sangon Biotech Company (Shanghai, China). The mitochondrial genome is deposited in GenBank with accession number MN356097.

The phylogenetic relationship was constructed using the Bayesian Inference (BI) (Ronquist et al. Citation2012) and RAxML 8.2.0 (Stamatakis Citation2014) softwares. To select conserved regions of the putative nucleotide sequences, each alignment was analyzed with Gblocks 0.91 b (Castresana Citation2000) using default settings. BI and ML trees were constructed using the 13 protein-coding genes of 21 species, which included 18 Mantidae species (Cameron et al. Citation2006; Song et al. Citation2016; Ye et al. Citation2016; Tian et al. Citation2017; Zhang and Ye Citation2017; Zhang, Yu et al. Citation2018; Zhang et al. Citation2018a, Citation2018b ) and three Blattaria species as the outgroups (Cameron and Whiting Citation2007; Dietrich and Brune Citation2016).

The complete mitogenome of M. religiosa from Canada was circular and 15,521 bp in length, containing the 38 mitochondrial genes including 13 protein-coding genes, 23 transfer RNA genes (including an additional tRNAArg gene), 2 ribosomal RNA genes. The same situation is typically found in the mitogenomes of other mantises (Ye et al. Citation2016; Zhang et al. Citation2019). The AT content of the complete mtDNA was 76.9% and the length of the control region was 636 bp with 81.9% AT content. Most protein-coding genes began with ATN (N represents A, T, C, G) as the start codons whereas the CO1 gene began with TTG. COX2 and ND5 genes ended with an incomplete stop codon (T–) whereas the remaining 11 protein-coding genes ended with TAA. The structure of the mitochondrial genome of the specimen from Canada was very similar to M. religiosa from China and their genetic distance was 0.017. The phylogenetic relationships inferred from the BI and ML analyses shared almost similar topologies (Figure 1). Mantis religiosa was a sister clade to Statilia sp. and the monophyly of the genera Hierodula and Rhombodera were not supported, which agrees with the previous results of Zhang and Ye (Citation2017) ().

Figure 1. Phylogenetic tree of the relationships among 18 species of Mantodea based on the first and the second codon positions of the 13 mitochondrial protein-coding genes of 7338 nucleotides. Three termite species were included as the outgroups (Cornitermes sp., M. parvus, R. flavipes). Numbers around the nodes are the bootstrap values of ML on top and the posterior probabilities of BI on the bottom. The GenBank numbers of all species are shown in the figure.

Figure 1. Phylogenetic tree of the relationships among 18 species of Mantodea based on the first and the second codon positions of the 13 mitochondrial protein-coding genes of 7338 nucleotides. Three termite species were included as the outgroups (Cornitermes sp., M. parvus, R. flavipes). Numbers around the nodes are the bootstrap values of ML on top and the posterior probabilities of BI on the bottom. The GenBank numbers of all species are shown in the figure.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.

Additional information

Funding

This work was supported by the Natural Science Foundation of Zhejiang Province [Y18C040006], the National Natural Science Foundation of China [31370042] and the College Students’ Innovation and Entrepreneurship Project in Zhejiang Normal University [No. 2019-217].

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