| Literature DB >> 19038056 |
Jie Yan1, Hongdan Li, Kaiya Zhou.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Snakes as a major reptile group display a variety of morphological characteristics pertaining to their diverse behaviours. Despite abundant analyses of morphological characters, molecular studies using mitochondrial and nuclear genes are limited. As a result, the phylogeny of snakes remains controversial. Previous studies on mitochondrial genomes of snakes have demonstrated duplication of the control region and translocation of trnL to be two notable features of the alethinophidian (all serpents except blindsnakes and threadsnakes) mtDNAs. Our purpose is to further investigate the gene organizations, evolution of the snake mitochondrial genome, and phylogenetic relationships among several major snake families.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2008 PMID: 19038056 PMCID: PMC2632649 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-9-569
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Genomics ISSN: 1471-2164 Impact factor: 3.969
List of taxa used in this study
| Ingroup | |||
| Scolecophidia | |||
| Typhlopidae | This study | ||
| Leptotyphlopidae | Kumazawa, 2004 | ||
| Alethinophidia | |||
| Henophidia | |||
| Boidae | Dong and Kumazawa, 2005 | ||
| Pythonidae | Dong and Kumazawa, 2005 | ||
| Cylindrophiidae | Dong and Kumazawa, 2005 | ||
| Xenopeltidae | Dong and Kumazawa, 2005 | ||
| Caenophidia | |||
| Colubridae | Kumazawa et al., 1998 | ||
| Jiang et al., 2007 | |||
| Elapidae | This study | ||
| Homalopsidae | This study | ||
| Viperidae | This study | ||
| Dong and Kumazawa, 2005 | |||
| Jiang et al., 2007 | |||
| Acrochordidae | Dong and Kumazawa, 2005 | ||
| Outgroup | |||
| Amphisbaenidae | Macey et al., 2004 | ||
| Scincidae | Kumazawa and Nishida, 1999 | ||
| Iguanidae | Janke et al., 2001 | ||
| Varanidae | Kumazawa and Endo, 2004 |
General characteristics of four snake mitochondrial genomes
| 16397 | 11286 | 2366 | 1456 | 1278 | 42.9 | 42.8 | 46.9 | 41.1 | 39.3 | |
| 17548 | 11287 | 2384 | 1430 | 2410 | 42.1 | 43.0 | 41.2 | 42.2 | 38.7 | |
| 17213 | 11241 | 2426 | 1435 | 2057 | 41.7 | 41.7 | 42.5 | 43.5 | 39.8 | |
| 17397 | 11261 | 2398 | 1416 | 2238 | 40.6 | 40.2 | 42.1 | 42.9 | 39.1 | |
Figure 1Comparison of mitochondrial gene organizations of snakes. Gene arrangements are presented for the following six types of snakes. I: Ramphotyphlops braminus; II:Leptotyphlops dulcis; III: Naja naja, Acrochordus granulatus, Boa constrictor, Cylindrophis ruffus, Python regius, Xenopeltis unicolor; IV: Dinodon semicarinatus, Pantherophis slowinskii, Enhydris plumbea; V: Ovophis okinavensis; VI: Deinagkistrodon acutus, Agkistrodon piscivorus. L1, L2, S1, S2. P* represent genes for trnL(UUR), trnL(CUN), trnS(AGY), trnS(UCN), and a pseudogene for trnP. tRNAs transcribed from the gene-rich and gene-poor strand were specified by noting their names above and below the gene map respectively. The tree topology on the right side was simplified from Fig. 2.
Figure 2Phylogenetic analyses of the amino acid and nucleotide sequence data sets. The phylogram shown is the best maximum likelihood tree (-lnL = 34008.56) obtained from the nucleotide data set. Bar represents 0.1 mutations per site. Nodes receiving support by one or more of the applied phylogenetic methods, i. e., Bayesian inference (BI), Maximum likelihood (ML), maximum parsimony (MP), Neighbor-joining (NJ) are labelled with lowercase letters. nt = values obtained from the nucleotide data set; and pr = values obtained from the amino acid data set. Bootstrap and Bayesian inference values are listed in the table. NR means that the corresponding nodal relationship was not reconstructed in the tree topology. Types I to VI are corresponding to those in Fig. 1.