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Jérémy GAUTHIER

and 23 more

The ithomiine butterflies (Nymphalidae: Danainae) represent the largest known radiation of Mullerian mimetic butterflies. They dominate by number the mimetic butterfly communities, which include species such as the iconic neotropical Heliconius genus. Despite recent studies carried out on ithomiine ecology and genetic structure, no reference genome was available for the tribe. Here, we generated high-quality, chromosome-scale genome assemblies of two Melinaea species, Melinaea marsaeus and Melinaea menophilus, and a draft genome of Ithomia salapia. We obtained genomes with a size ranging from 396 Mb to 503 Mb across the three species and scaffold N50 of 40.5 Mb and 23.2 Mb for the two chromosome-scale assemblies. Using collinearity analyses we identified massive rearrangements between the two closely related Melinaea species. A detailed annotation of transposable elements and genes was performed, resulting in the identification of 24,341, 31,081 and 31,976 genes in I. salapia, M. marsaeus and M. menophilus, respectively. We used a specialist annotation to target chemosensory genes, which is crucial for host plant detection and mate recognition in mimetic species. A comparative genomic approach revealed independent gene expansions in ithomiines and particularly in gustatory receptor genes. These first three genomes of ithomiine mimetic butterflies constitute a valuable addition and a welcome comparison to existing biological models of mimicry, such as Heliconius, and will enable further understanding of the mechanisms of adaptation and the genetic bases underpinning mimicry.