Dx. Zhang et Gm. Hewitt, INSECT MITOCHONDRIAL CONTROL REGION - A REVIEW OF ITS STRUCTURE, EVOLUTION AND USEFULNESS IN EVOLUTIONARY STUDIES, Biochemical systematics and ecology, 25(2), 1997, pp. 99-120
control region is the only major non-coding region in the mitochondria
l genome of insects. It is heavily biased to A+T nucleotides and seems
to evolve under a strong directional mutation pressure. Among insects
, this region is variable in both size and nucleotide sequence and may
contain tandem repetition which is often associated with heteroplasmy
. Tandem repetition appears to undergo concerted evolution and copy nu
mber variation indicates a high mutation rate. In contrast, the nucleo
tide substitution rate in this region is likely to be much reduced due
to high A+T content and directional mutation pressure. Insect mitocho
ndrial control regions are not necessarily the most variable region in
the genome in terms of nucleotide substitution, and may not evolve fa
ster than single-copy nuclear non-coding sequences. These observations
have implications for the use of this region as a genetic marker in e
volutionary studies. Contrary to earlier expectation, this region may
have limited usefulness for both inter- and intra-specific analyses, d
epending on the structure and evolutionary patterns of a particular se
quence. As some structural elements have been observed to be highly co
nserved between phylogenetically very distant insect taxa, it is of gr
eat interest to study the molecular evolution of this region in the en
tire class, Insecta. (C) 1997 Elsevier Science Ltd.