# Cytogenetics of insects in the era of chromosome-level genome assemblies

**Authors:** V.A. Lukhtanov, E.A. Pazhenkova

PMC · DOI: 10.18699/vjgb-25-26 · Vavilov Journal of Genetics and Breeding · 2025-04-01

## TL;DR

New genomic tools have transformed insect cytogenetics, revealing detailed chromosome structures and evolutionary patterns previously unknown.

## Contribution

High-quality genome assemblies enable precise analysis of chromosomal rearrangements and evolution in insects.

## Key findings

- Chromosomal number changes in Lepidoptera occur via simple fusions and fissions at reused breakpoints.
- Chromosome fissions correlate with interstitial telomeres inside chromosomes.
- Telomeric DNA in insects includes long sequences with retrotransposon interruptions and diverse motifs.

## Abstract

Over the past few years, a revolution has occurred in cytogenetics, driven by the emergence and spread of methods for obtaining high-quality chromosome-level genome assemblies. In fact, this has led to a new tool for studying chromosomes and chromosomal rearrangements, and this tool is thousands of times more powerful than light microscopy. This tool has revolutionized the cytogenetics of many groups of insects for which previously karyotype information, if available at all, was limited to the chromosome number. Even more impressive are the achievements of the genomic approach for studying the general patterns of chromosome organization and evolution in insects. Thus, it has been shown that rapid transformations of chromosomal numbers, which are often found in the order Lepidoptera, are most often carried out in the most parsimonious way, as a result of simple fusions and fissions of chromosomes. It has been established that these fusions and fissions are not random and occur independently in different phylogenetic lineages due to the reuse of the same ancestral chromosomal breakpoints. It has been shown that the tendency for chromosome fissions is correlated with the presence in chromosomes of the so-called interstitial telomeres, i. e. telomere-like structures located not at the ends of chromosomes, but inside them. It has been revealed that, in most insects, telomeric DNA is not just a set of short repeats, but a very long sequence consisting of (TTAGG)n (or other telomeric motifs), regularly and specifically interrupted by retrotransposons, and the telomeric motifs are diverse in terms of their length and nucleotide composition. The number of high-quality chromosome-level genome assemblies available for insects in the GenBank database is growing exponentially and now exceeds a thousand species. Therefore, the exceptional prospects for using genomic data for karyotype analysis are beyond doubt.

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** malaria (MESH:D008288)
- **Chemicals:** evad111 (-)
- **Species:** Bombyx mori (domestic silkworm, species) [taxon 7091], Anopheles coluzzii (species) [taxon 1518534], Coleoptera (beetles, order) [taxon 7041], Eucriotettix oculatus (species) [taxon 470944], Siphlonurus alternatus (species) [taxon 248243], Ctenocephalides felis (cat flea, species) [taxon 7515], Pieris brassicae (cabbage butterfly, species) [taxon 7116], Lysandra bellargus (Adonis blue butterfly, species) [taxon 138070], Eubasilissa splendida (species) [taxon 1875367], Chironomus plumosus (buzzer midge, species) [taxon 33397], Anopheles arabiensis (species) [taxon 7173], Cimex lectularius (bed bug, species) [taxon 79782], Aedes aegypti (yellow fever mosquito, species) [taxon 7159], Cyaniris semiargus (species) [taxon 988025], Aethina tumida (small hive beetle, species) [taxon 116153], Heliconius (genus) [taxon 33416], Liposcelis brunnea (species) [taxon 209989], Eriosoma lanigerum (woolly apple aphid, species) [taxon 133082], Mus musculus (house mouse, species) [taxon 10090], Plecoptera (genus) [taxon 1266065], Hymenoptera (hymenopterans, order) [taxon 7399], Maniola jurtina (meadow brown, species) [taxon 191418], Chrysopa pallens (species) [taxon 417485], Iphiclides podalirius (scarce swallowtail, species) [taxon 110791], Cimex hemipterus (species) [taxon 757355], Hetaerina titia (species) [taxon 62019], Centroberyx lineatus (swallow-tail, species) [taxon 166263], Plecoptera (stoneflies, order) [taxon 50622], Collembola (snow fleas, class) [taxon 30001], Apis mellifera (bee, species) [taxon 7460], Chironomus thummi (midge, species) [taxon 7154], Erebia ligea (Arran brown butterfly, species) [taxon 111903], Leptidea (genus) [taxon 189907], Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly, species) [taxon 7227], Cydia pomonella (codling moth, species) [taxon 82600], Bombyx (genus) [taxon 7090], Phasmatodea (stick insects, order) [taxon 7020], Entomobrya proxima (species) [taxon 1302324], Protonemura montana (species) [taxon 2884235], Callitettix versicolor (species) [taxon 533009], Trichoptera (caddisflies, order) [taxon 30263], Drosophila virilis (species) [taxon 7244], Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606], Arma custos (species) [taxon 291269]

## Full text

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## Figures

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC12036569