The first mitochondrial genome of Macrobrachium rosenbergii from China: phylogeny and gene rearrangement within Caridea

6Citations
Citations of this article
15Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.

This article is free to access.

Abstract

Macrobrachium rosenbergii de Man, 1879 (Caridea: Palaemonidae), commonly referred to as giant freshwater prawn, is commercially important worldwide, and a primary inland cultured species. The first complete mitochondrial genome of M. rosenbergii from China (CN) was sequenced and compared with that in Indonesia (ID) in this study. The results show that the total length of CN-mtDNA sequence is 15,767 bp (GenBank accession number: KY865098), which is shorter than that of ID-mtDNA (15,772 bp). It encodes 37 genes, including 13 protein-coding genes, 22 transfer RNA genes and 2 ribosomal RNA genes. The heavy strand and light strand encode 23 and 14 genes, respectively, and the content of A + T is 61.81%. The gene order and content of CN-mtDNA and ID-mtDNA are identical to the primitive Pancrustacean ground pattern. Phylogenetic analysis shows that CN-mtDNA is clustered into one clade with ID-mtDNA (BP =100). Pairwise genetic distance analyses indicate that the genetic distance of CN-mtDNA and ID-mtDNA is 0.086, which is smaller than values between species in the Macrobrachium genus. In summary, both phylogenetic analysis and gene re-arrrangement analysis between the M. rosenbergii in China and Indonesia have revealed that their differences are within intraspecific variation.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Li, Y., Song, J., Shen, X., Cai, Y., Cheng, H., Zhang, X., … Chu, K. H. (2019). The first mitochondrial genome of Macrobrachium rosenbergii from China: phylogeny and gene rearrangement within Caridea. Mitochondrial DNA Part B: Resources, 4(1), 134–136. https://doi.org/10.1080/23802359.2018.1540262

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free