# Evolutionary genomics and divergence of Cacopsylla species with a special focus on the apple proliferation vectors Cacopsylla melanoneura and Cacopsylla picta

**Authors:** Lapo Ragionieri, Liliya Štarhová Serbina, Erika Corretto, James M. Howie, Fernando Cruz, Tyler S. Alioto, Nicola Zadra, Tobias Weil, Gianfranco Anfora, Christian Stauffer, Lino Ometto, Omar Rota-Stabelli, Hannes Schuler

PMC · DOI: 10.1186/s12864-026-12622-0 · 2026-03-19

## TL;DR

This study explores the evolutionary history of Cacopsylla species, focusing on those that spread Apple Proliferation disease, revealing two distinct genetic groups and how vector traits evolved independently.

## Contribution

The study provides the first genomic resources for Cacopsylla species and shows that vector competence evolved independently rather than being inherited from a common ancestor.

## Key findings

- Cacopsylla species are divided into two major clades with divergence times dating back to the Miocene era.
- Vector competence in Cacopsylla melanoneura and Cacopsylla picta evolved independently, not from shared ancestry.
- Genome size differences between species are largely due to transposable element expansions, especially LINE elements.

## Abstract

The psyllid genus Cacopsylla includes several species that act as vectors for phytoplasma-associated diseases affecting plantations across Europe. Among them, Cacopsylla melanoneura and Cacopsylla picta are the primary vectors of ‘Candidatus Phytoplasma mali’, the phloem-restricted bacterium responsible for Apple Proliferation disease in Europe. To explore whether vector competence in these species reflects shared ancestry or independent evolution, we assembled mitochondrial and draft nuclear genomes of Italian populations of C. melanoneura and C. picta and reconstructed time-calibrated phylogenies using 13 mitochondrial protein-coding genes from 12 Cacopsylla species.

Phylogenetic analyses revealed two major Cacopsylla clades (Clade I and II) whose divergence times range from the Early Miocene (18.4 MYA; 95% HPD: 10.8–27.5) to the Middle Miocene (12.7 MYA; 95% HPD: 9.7–16.0). Both C. melanoneura and C. picta are within Clade I, which is predominantly composed of univoltine species that overwinter on conifers. Within this clade, Cacopsylla melanoneura is more closely related to the plum psyllid Cacopsylla pruni than to the apple-associated Cacopsylla picta and Cacopsylla mali, the latter belonging to Clade II. Draft nuclear genomes revealed significant differences in size (438 Mb in C. melanoneura vs. 631 Mb in C. picta), largely attributed to repetitive elements. Comparative analyses of repetitive elements across Cacopsylla species revealed a recent expansion of transposable elements, particularly LINE elements, which were slightly more abundant in Clade I and contributed to the larger genome size observed in C. picta.

Collectively, our findings provide the first genomic resources for C. melanoneura, C. picta, and several other phytoplasma-vectoring Cacopsylla species. We established a robust mitogenomic phylogeny with divergence estimated for this genus showing the presence of two clades with the representatives predominantly associated with different overwintering strategies. Our results further indicate that vectorial capacity in Cacopsylla reflects an independent evolutionary trajectory rather than a shared ancestral origin. This evolutionary framework advances our understanding of the biology and origin of vector competence in this agriculturally important group.

The online version contains supplementary material available at 10.1186/s12864-026-12622-0.

## Linked entities

- **Species:** Cacopsylla melanoneura (taxon 428564), Cacopsylla picta (taxon 1522058), Cacopsylla pruni (taxon 394530), Cacopsylla mali (taxon 178974)

## Full-text entities

- **Genes:** MCC [NCBI Gene 101948898], Cytochrome c Oxidase Subunit I [NCBI Gene 808744]
- **Diseases:** burn (MESH:D002056), SINEs (MESH:D031368), AP (MESH:C565054), infection (MESH:D007239), PCGs (MESH:D011488), P. mali (MESH:D002972)
- **Chemicals:** nucleotide (MESH:D009711), DTT (MESH:D004229), water (MESH:D014867), amino acid (MESH:D000596), DDT (MESH:D003634), ethanol (MESH:D000431), polyvoltine (-)
- **Species:** Myzus persicae (green peach aphid, species) [taxon 13164], Paurocephala sauteri (species) [taxon 2768670], Chrysemys picta (Painted turtle, species) [taxon 8479], Aphis gossypii (cotton aphid, species) [taxon 80765], Euphyllura phillyreae (species) [taxon 2008460], Escherichia coli (E. coli, species) [taxon 562], Lanthanaphalara mira (species) [taxon 2218050], Malus domestica (apple, species) [taxon 3750], Citrus (genus) [taxon 2706], Candidatus Phytoplasma prunorum (European stone fruit yellows mycoplasma-like organism, species) [taxon 47565], Candidatus Phytoplasma mali (Apple proliferation mycoplasma-like organism, species) [taxon 37692], Cacopsylla coccinea (species) [taxon 1646117], Livia junci (species) [taxon 1449964], Bemisia tabaci (sweet potato whitefly, species) [taxon 7038], Helicoverpa armigera (American bollworm, species) [taxon 29058], Aphidomorpha (aphids, infraorder) [taxon 33380], Cacopsylla citrisuga (species) [taxon 1535368], Acyrthosiphon pisum (pea aphid, species) [taxon 7029], Drosophila montana (species) [taxon 40370], Pyrus communis (pear, species) [taxon 23211], Cacopsylla picta (species) [taxon 1522058], Drosophila melanogaster (fruit fly, species) [taxon 7227], Cacopsylla mali (species) [taxon 178974], Fieberiella florii (species) [taxon 139506], Megachile rotundata (alfalfa leafcutting bee, species) [taxon 143995], Osmia lignaria (orchard mason bee, species) [taxon 473952], Aleurodicus dugesii (Doogie Howzer whitefly, species) [taxon 30099], Liberibacter (genus) [taxon 34019], Cacopsylla jukyungi (species) [taxon 2593406], Hexapoda (hexapods, subphylum) [taxon 6960], Homalodisca vitripennis (glassy-winged sharpshooter, species) [taxon 197043], Aphidoidea (superfamily) [taxon 33385], Cacopsylla pruni (apricot psyllid, species) [taxon 394530], Cacopsylla pyri (European pear sucker, species) [taxon 121839], Aleyrodoidea (whiteflies, superfamily) [taxon 33377], Pyrus (pears, genus) [taxon 3766], Cacopsylla pyrisuga (species) [taxon 1191701], Crataegus (hawthorn, genus) [taxon 23159], Cacopsylla melanoneura (species) [taxon 428564], conifers [taxon 3312]

## Figures

2 figures with captions in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13003732/full.md

---
Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC13003732