Introduction
The family Cyprinidae, belonging to the order Cypriniformes, represents the largest and most diverse group of fishes, comprising 1784 valid species classified into 166 genera (Mayden 1991; Fricke et al. 2025). This group plays a crucial role in the ecology and evolutionary dynamics of aquatic communities worldwide (Mayden 1991). Within the family Cyprinidae, the clade “Poropuntiinae” comprises approximately 100 species under 16 genera, representing a substantial component of the ichthyofaunal diversity (Khensuwan et al. 2023). The clade includes the genus Cyclocheilichthys, which comprises eight valid species (
The taxonomy of Cyclocheilichthys has been a subject of scientific debate over the past decade, particularly regarding its monophyletic status. The morphological and phylogenetic analyses based on mitochondrial (Cytb and COI) and nuclear (RAG1 and RAG2) markers initially suggested a division of the genus into two groups, with Cyclocheilichthys retained for C. enoplos and Anematichthys proposed for other species such as A. apogon,
Extensive research has been conducted to elucidate the biological, ecological, and taxonomic aspects of Cyclocheilichthys species. Studies on feeding ecology, seasonal dietary patterns, parasite diversity, autecology, epidemiology, and reproductive dynamics have been widely explored for Cyclocheilichthys (Nithiuthai et al. 2002; Hamid et al. 2015; Chavengkun et al. 2016; Rosli and Zain 2016; Nuraini et al. 2017; Juntaban et al. 2021). Furthermore, the systematic studies integrated both morphological and molecular data to provide insights into genetic diversity, phylogenetic relationships, population structure, and demographic history of Cyclocheilichthys species across Southeast Asia (Kenthao and Jearranaiprepame 2018; Kenthao et al. 2018; Roesma et al. 2023). With advancements in molecular approaches for biodiversity and systematics research, complete mitochondrial genome sequencing has emerged as a powerful tool for evolutionary assessments in fishes (Satoh et al. 2016). The utility of mitogenome analyses is driven by its maternal inheritance, highly conserved structure, and relatively high mutation rate, making it a valuable marker for evolutionary studies (Miya et al. 2003). The comparative mitogenome analyses are instrumental in investigating evolutionary diversification, ecological adaptations, phylogenetic relationships, and conservation implications, including those within cyprinid fishes (Hinsinger et al. 2015). To date, the mitogenomes of three Cyclocheilichthys species (
Materials and Methods
A single cyprinid fish specimen was collected from Lake Dibawah, Sumatra, Indonesia (1.026389 S 100.739722 E). The species identification was confirmed based on the morphological characteristics of
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The focal species (
The genomic DNA was isolated from approximately 30 mg of muscle tissue of
To generate the mitogenome of
In this study, a circular map of the mitogenome of
To elucidate the phylogenetic position of
To assess the genetic diversity and demographic distinctiveness of
Results
The generated COI sequence was validated using nucleotide BLAST (), showing 98.97% identity with a reference sequence from the GenBank database (Accession No. JQ346165), thereby confirming species identity. The mitogenome of
TABLE 1 Gene organization of the complete mitochondrial genome of
Genes | Start | End | Strand | Size (bp) | Intergenic nucleotide | Anti-codon | Start codon | Stop codon |
tRNA-Phe | 1 | 69 | H | 69 | 0 | GAA | ˙ | ˙ |
12S rRNA | 70 | 1022 | H | 953 | 0 | ˙ | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Val | 1023 | 1094 | H | 72 | 0 | TAC | ˙ | ˙ |
16S rRNA | 1095 | 2775 | H | 1681 | 0 | ˙ | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Leu | 2776 | 2851 | H | 76 | 0 | TAA | ˙ | ˙ |
ND1 | 2852 | 3826 | H | 975 | 4 | ˙ | ATG | TAA |
tRNA-Ile | 3831 | 3902 | H | 72 | −2 | GAT | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Gln | 3901 | 3971 | L | 71 | 1 | TTG | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Met | 3973 | 4041 | H | 69 | 0 | CAT | ˙ | ˙ |
ND2 | 4042 | 5086 | H | 1045 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | T-- |
tRNA-Trp | 5087 | 5157 | H | 71 | 2 | TCA | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Ala | 5160 | 5228 | L | 69 | 1 | TGC | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Asn | 5230 | 5302 | L | 73 | 33 | GTT | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Cys | 5336 | 5402 | L | 67 | −1 | GCA | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Tyr | 5402 | 5472 | L | 71 | 1 | GTA | ˙ | ˙ |
COI | 5474 | 7021 | H | 1548 | −1 | ˙ | GTG | TAA |
tRNA-Ser | 7021 | 7092 | L | 72 | 3 | TGA | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Asp | 7096 | 7167 | H | 72 | 14 | GTC | ˙ | ˙ |
COII | 7182 | 7872 | H | 691 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | T-- |
tRNA-Lys | 7873 | 7948 | H | 76 | 1 | TTT | ˙ | ˙ |
ATP8 | 7950 | 8114 | H | 165 | −7 | ˙ | ATG | TAG |
ATP6 | 8108 | 8790 | H | 683 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | TA- |
COIII | 8791 | 9575 | H | 785 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | TA- |
tRNA-Gly | 9576 | 9648 | H | 73 | 0 | TCC | ˙ | ˙ |
ND3 | 9649 | 9997 | H | 349 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | T-- |
tRNA-Arg | 9998 | 10,067 | H | 70 | 0 | TCG | ˙ | ˙ |
ND4L | 10,068 | 10,364 | H | 297 | −7 | . | ATG | TAA |
ND4 | 10,358 | 11,738 | H | 1381 | 0 | . | ATG | T-- |
tRNA-His | 11,739 | 11,807 | H | 69 | 0 | GTG | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Ser | 11,808 | 11,877 | H | 70 | 1 | GCT | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Leu | 11,879 | 11,951 | H | 73 | 3 | TAG | ˙ | ˙ |
ND5 | 11,955 | 13,778 | H | 1824 | −4 | ˙ | ATG | TAA |
ND6 | 13,775 | 14,296 | L | 522 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | TTA |
tRNA-Glu | 14,297 | 14,365 | L | 69 | 5 | TTC | ˙ | ˙ |
Cytb | 14,371 | 15,511 | H | 1141 | 0 | ˙ | ATG | TT- |
tRNA-Thr | 15,512 | 15,583 | H | 72 | −1 | TGT | ˙ | ˙ |
tRNA-Pro | 15,583 | 15,653 | L | 71 | 0 | TGG | ˙ | ˙ |
Control region | 15,654 | 16,571 | H | 918 | ˙ | ˙ | ˙ | ˙ |
TABLE 2 Size and nucleotide composition of the complete mitochondrial genomes and different genes across various
Species name | Size (bp) | A% | T% | G% | C% | A + T% | AT-Skew | GC-Skew |
Complete mitogenome | ||||||||
|
16,571 | 33.04 | 24.66 | 15.20 | 27.10 | 57.70 | 0.145 | −0.281 |
|
16,580 | 33.66 | 24.64 | 14.86 | 26.85 | 58.30 | 0.155 | −0.288 |
|
16,586 | 33.37 | 24.87 | 14.89 | 26.87 | 58.24 | 0.146 | −0.287 |
|
16,573 | 32.66 | 25.88 | 15.30 | 26.16 | 58.54 | 0.116 | −0.262 |
PCGs | ||||||||
|
11,406 | 31.15 | 26.64 | 14.60 | 27.62 | 57.79 | 0.078 | −0.308 |
|
11,409 | 31.94 | 26.71 | 14.16 | 27.20 | 58.65 | 0.089 | −0.315 |
|
11,408 | 31.74 | 27.05 | 14.07 | 27.14 | 58.79 | 0.080 | −0.317 |
|
11,415 | 30.70 | 27.74 | 14.88 | 26.69 | 58.43 | 0.051 | −0.284 |
rRNAs | ||||||||
|
2587 | 35.21 | 19.64 | 20.49 | 24.66 | 54.85 | 0.284 | −0.092 |
|
2636 | 35.62 | 19.20 | 20.30 | 24.89 | 54.82 | 0.300 | −0.102 |
|
2634 | 35.23 | 19.17 | 20.58 | 25.02 | 54.40 | 0.295 | −0.097 |
|
2634 | 35.65 | 20.12 | 20.05 | 24.18 | 55.77 | 0.278 | −0.094 |
tRNAs | ||||||||
|
1567 | 31.14 | 24.44 | 19.40 | 25.02 | 55.58 | 0.121 | −0.126 |
|
1563 | 28.92 | 27.38 | 23.10 | 20.60 | 56.30 | 0.027 | 0.057 |
|
1564 | 28.96 | 27.17 | 23.15 | 20.72 | 56.14 | 0.032 | 0.055 |
|
1568 | 29.15 | 28.64 | 22.64 | 19.58 | 57.78 | 0.009 | 0.073 |
CRs | ||||||||
|
918 | 36.17 | 32.57 | 12.09 | 19.17 | 68.74 | 0.052 | −0.226 |
|
926 | 35.21 | 32.18 | 12.63 | 19.98 | 67.39 | 0.045 | −0.225 |
|
932 | 34.76 | 31.33 | 12.45 | 21.46 | 66.09 | 0.052 | −0.266 |
|
917 | 34.68 | 33.91 | 13.09 | 18.32 | 68.59 | 0.011 | −0.167 |
In this study, the mitogenome of
The mitogenome of
In-depth analysis, the nucleotide diversity (π) was assessed, and the highest π value was found in the base region 10,811–11,010 of the Cytb gene (π = 0.153), indicating the greatest level of polymorphism among the PCGs, followed by the ND2 gene with a π value of 0.140. Conversely, the COI gene exhibited the lowest π value of 0.048, suggesting it was the most conserved gene among the analyzed PCGs (Figure 2A). The saturation analysis revealed that neither transitions nor transversions experienced saturation, as the F84 divergence values consistently increased across all PCGs of the Cyclocheilichthys mitogenomes (Figure 2B). The four species examined showed similar amino acid abundances, reflecting comparable codon usage preferences among them. Leucine (Leu), serine (Ser), threonine (Thr), and isoleucine (Ile) were the most abundant amino acids across all species. Notably, the amino acid composition of
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Focusing on rRNA genes, the
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The target species,
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The phylogenetic analysis, conducted using both BA and ML approaches based on concatenated sequences of 13 PCGs, offers a comprehensive insight into the major phylogenetic relationships within the family Cyprinidae (Figure 6; Figure S1). The mitogenomic phylogenies revealed a close relationship between Cyclocheilichthys and Albulichthys in both BA and ML analyses. The congeners of Cyclocheilichthys formed a monophyletic clade, with
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Genetic Diversity and Phylogeny Based on
The overall mean genetic distance within the Cyclocheilichthys dataset was 5.2% (ranging from 0% to 10.1%), including three congeners (Table S8). The mean intraspecific genetic distances for
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Discussion
The mitogenome of
The mitochondrial nucleotide diversity (π) varied considerably among PCGs, with some genes exhibiting higher polymorphism likely attributable to elevated mutation rates and potential adaptive evolution in teleosts (Duchêne et al. 2022). The saturation analysis revealed no evidence of substitution saturation, reaffirming the phylogenetic utility of these mitochondrial markers (Parvathy et al. 2022). The amino acid profiles across Cyclocheilichthys species were highly conserved, dominated by leucine, serine, threonine, and isoleucine—amino acids commonly favored due to codon usage bias and structural constraints in fish mitochondrial proteins (Yang and Nielsen 2000). The selective pressure analysis based on Ka/Ks ratios indicated strong purifying selection acting on all mitochondrial PCGs in
The secondary structures of rRNA genes remained conserved across species, underscoring their essential roles in ribosomal assembly and mitochondrial translation (Bradshaw et al. 2005). All 22 tRNA genes displayed typical cloverleaf structures except tRNA-Ser (S1), which lacked a stable DHU arm, a common deviation among metazoan mitogenomes. The lengths of tRNA genes varied, with tRNA-Leu and tRNA-Lys being the longest, and tRNA-Cys the shortest—patterns consistent with other teleosts (Yoon et al. 2024). The presence of widespread G–U wobble base pairs suggests structural flexibility in the tRNA collection, likely enhancing codon recognition efficiency during translation (Salinas-Giegé et al. 2015). The complete conservation of tRNA anticodon sequences across the studied Cyclocheilichthys species reflects their close evolutionary relationships and strong functional constraints on mitochondrial tRNA genes (Satoh et al. 2010; Fonseca et al. 2012). The species-specific variations in CSBs, tandem repeat motifs, and key regulatory elements within the mitochondrial CR likely represent lineage-specific modifications of its regulatory architecture (Ewusi et al. 2024; Aini et al. 2025). The tandem repeats in the CR showed variation in length, copy number, and positional distribution, suggesting differential replication slippage events and regulatory evolution across species (Lee et al. 1995). As hypervariable loci, the CR tandem repeats play critical roles not only in mitochondrial replication and transcription but also serve as robust molecular markers for high-resolution analyses in fish species identification and population genetic studies (Lunt et al. 1998).
The phylogenetic reconstruction performed in this study reveals a close lineage association between
From a demographic perspective, the complex geology and paleogeographic history of the Sundaland biodiversity hotspot have been pivotal in shaping the distribution patterns and genetic structure of Southeast Asian freshwater fishes (Sholihah et al. 2021; Delrieu-Trottin et al. 2025). The tectonic processes, including the subduction between the Asian and Australian plates, and intense volcanic activity, have profoundly altered habitats and established distinct biogeographic boundaries (Lohman et al. 2011). The physical barriers, such as deep-sea trenches surrounding Sundaland, mountain ranges, and fault zones, have contributed to spatial isolation among populations, promoting genetic differentiation through limited dispersal, colonization bottlenecks, and habitat fragmentation (Šlechtová et al. 2025). The previous phylogeographic studies have presented cryptic lineages and high levels of genetic diversity in numerous freshwater species across this region, emphasizing the critical role of genetic data in biodiversity conservation planning (Sholihah et al. 2020; Wibowo et al. 2024). Notably, during the Last Glacial Maximum (approximately 26,500–19,000 years ago), sea levels dropped by about 120 m, exposing land bridges that facilitated ichthyofaunal exchanges between mainland and islands in Southeast Asia (Voris 2000; Cheng and Faidi 2025). However, this connectivity was disrupted during the Younger Dryas period (circa 12,500–11,500 years ago), when rising temperatures and a sea-level increase of approximately 62 m gradually submerged lowlands, fragmenting Sundaland into its present-day archipelagic configuration (Dansgaard et al. 1989; Lambeck et al. 2014; Harrington et al. 2024).
In this context, the limited availability of mitogenomic data has constrained comprehensive demographic reconstructions of
The target species,
While this study presents the first complete mitogenome of the endemic freshwater fish
Conclusion
This study successfully characterized the first complete mitogenome of
Author Contributions
Ayu Fitri Izaki: data curation (supporting), methodology (equal), writing – original draft (supporting). Sarifah Aini: formal analysis (equal), software (equal), writing – original draft (supporting). Angkasa Putra: formal analysis (equal), software (equal), writing – original draft (supporting). Hey-Eun Kang: validation (equal), visualization (supporting). Ah Ran Kim: investigation (equal), methodology (equal). Soo Rin Lee: data curation (supporting), visualization (supporting). Mugi Mulyono: investigation (equal), validation (equal). Muhammad Hilman Fu'adil Amin: data curation (supporting), visualization (supporting). Hyun-Woo Kim: conceptualization (equal), funding acquisition (equal), project administration (equal), resources (equal), supervision (equal), writing – review and editing (equal). Shantanu Kundu: conceptualization (equal), funding acquisition (equal), project administration (equal), resources (equal), supervision (equal), writing – review and editing (equal).
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to express their sincere gratitude to the Government of Solok Regency, West Sumatra Province, Republic of Indonesia, with special thanks to Mr. Zaitul Ikhlas and Mrs. Yossi Agusta, for their generous support and facilitation during field sampling and the implementation of this research. The authors also extend their deep appreciation to Mr. Hamdani of the Jakarta Technical University of Fisheries, Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries, Republic of Indonesia, for his invaluable assistance in the preparation and coordination of proper documentation for the international shipment of samples to South Korea. The authors (S.A. and A.P.) gratefully acknowledge the Interdisciplinary Program of Marine and Fisheries Sciences and Convergent Technology at Pukyong National University, Busan, South Korea, for supporting and accommodating their Ph.D. program.
Conflicts of Interest
The authors declare no conflicts of interest.
Data Availability Statement
The mitogenome and partial COI sequence data supporting the findings of this study are publicly available in GenBank (NCBI) under the accession numbers PP937077 and PX022682, respectively, accessible at .
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Abstract
ABSTRACT
The systematic status of the genus
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1 Department of Marine Biology, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea
2 Interdisciplinary Program of Marine and Fisheries Sciences and Convergent Technology, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea
3 Institute of Marine Life Science, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea
4 Institute of Marine Living Modified Organisms, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea, Marine Integrated Biomedical Technology Center, National Key Research Institutes in Universities, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea
5 Jakarta Technical University of Fisheries, Ministry of Marine Affairs and Fisheries, Jakarta, Republic of Indonesia
6 Advance Tropical Biodiversity, Genomics, and Conservation Research Group, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology, Airlangga University, Surabaya, Republic of Indonesia
7 Department of Marine Biology, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea, Marine Integrated Biomedical Technology Center, National Key Research Institutes in Universities, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea, Research Center for Marine Integrated Bionics Technology, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea, Department of Biology, Faculty of Science and Technology, Airlangga University, Surabaya, Republic of Indonesia
8 Interdisciplinary Program of Marine and Fisheries Sciences and Convergent Technology, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea, Ocean and Fisheries Development International Cooperation Institute, College of Fisheries Science, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea, International Graduate Program of Fisheries Science, Pukyong National University, Busan, Republic of Korea