Understanding the functions of mitochondrial genomes is crucial for studies related to the evolution of genomes, phylogenomics, and species identification. For the first time, complete mitogenome of Potamalpheops sp. a non-snapping shrimp has been successfully sequenced and characterized from Taiwan that belongs to the Decapoda order, Crustacea class, and Caridea infraorder. This study involved analysis of nucleotide composition, codon usage, gene ordering, evolutionary selection pressure, and comparative mitogenomics. The mitogenome of Potamalpheops sp. is 16,605 base pairs in length and consists of standard set of 37 genes found in metazoans. The gene rearrangements in the mitochondrial genome of this species shows extensive rearrangements comparing to the typical pattern found in pancrustaceans mitogenomes. Therefore, it could be concluded that gene rearrangements most likely happen only in the caridea infraorder. The current investigation discovered transposition of the tRNA and rRNA genes along with reversal in strands in the tRNAs. No other Alpheidae mitochondrial genome that has been investigated thus far has revealed this pattern. All 13 protein coding genes in the mitochondrial genomes of superfamily Alphoidea exhibited Ka/Ks values lower than 1, according to the ratios of nonsynonymous and synonymous substitutions rates. This suggests that a strong purifying selection had taken place. The maximum likelihood tree consisting of 46 mitogenomes of infraorder Caridea along with outgroups, revealed the existence of Potamalpheops sp. in the family Alpheidae and it formed a monophyletic group along with Palaemonoidea and Alpheoidea superfamily.
Keywords: Alpheidae; gene‐rearrangement; mitogenome; phylogenomics; purifying selection.
© 2024 The Author(s). Ecology and Evolution published by John Wiley & Sons Ltd.