Literature DB >> 19660126

Phylogeny and mitochondrial gene order variation in Lophotrochozoa in the light of new mitogenomic data from Nemertea.

Lars Podsiadlowski1, Anke Braband, Torsten H Struck, Jörn von Döhren, Thomas Bartolomaeus.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The new animal phylogeny established several taxa which were not identified by morphological analyses, most prominently the Ecdysozoa (arthropods, roundworms, priapulids and others) and Lophotrochozoa (molluscs, annelids, brachiopods and others). Lophotrochozoan interrelationships are under discussion, e.g. regarding the position of Nemertea (ribbon worms), which were discussed to be sister group to e.g. Mollusca, Brachiozoa or Platyhelminthes. Mitochondrial genomes contributed well with sequence data and gene order characters to the deep metazoan phylogeny debate.
RESULTS: In this study we present the first complete mitochondrial genome record for a member of the Nemertea, Lineus viridis. Except two trnP and trnT, all genes are located on the same strand. While gene order is most similar to that of the brachiopod Terebratulina retusa, sequence based analyses of mitochondrial genes place nemerteans close to molluscs, phoronids and entoprocts without clear preference for one of these taxa as sister group.
CONCLUSION: Almost all recent analyses with large datasets show good support for a taxon comprising Annelida, Mollusca, Brachiopoda, Phoronida and Nemertea. But the relationships among these taxa vary between different studies. The analysis of gene order differences gives evidence for a multiple independent occurrence of a large inversion in the mitochondrial genome of Lophotrochozoa and a re-inversion of the same part in gastropods. We hypothesize that some regions of the genome have a higher chance for intramolecular recombination than others and gene order data have to be analysed carefully to detect convergent rearrangement events.

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Mesh:

Year:  2009        PMID: 19660126      PMCID: PMC2728741          DOI: 10.1186/1471-2164-10-364

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  BMC Genomics        ISSN: 1471-2164            Impact factor:   3.969


Background

Starting about 25 years ago molecular phylogenetic approaches established a new system of animal taxonomy [1,2]. Bilateria are split into three major subtaxa, the traditional Deuterostomia and two recently established groups, which were founded initially by molecular evidence: the Ecdysozoa (combining arthropods with nemathelminth taxa like nematodes, priapulids etc.) and the Lophotrochozoa (comprising the taxa formerly combined in Spiralia, except Arthropoda, but additionaly including the lophophorate taxa Brachiopoda, Phoronida and Ectoprocta). Despite controversy about the specific position of some taxa, these three major groups now seem to be well established and are frequently recovered in analyses of different molecular datasets like ribosomal RNAs [3-6], mitochondrial genomes [7-9] and EST datasets [10-13]. The lophotrochozoan taxon Nemertea (ribbon worms) comprises about 1150 free-living species, most of which inhabit marine environments, but a few species also occur in freshwater and even in terrestrial habitats [14]. Morphological characters like the acoelomate organisation, the architecture of the nervous system, the sense organs and the protonephridial excretory structures were arguments for the traditional placement of Nemertea close to the Platyhelminthes (reviewed in [15]), while a trochophora-like larva with a prototroch gives some evidence for an inclusion into Trochozoa [16]. Special features like the closed circulatory system (in an acoelomat body cavity!) and the retractable proboscis, serving for prey catching, are apomorphies which clearly support monophyly of the Nemertea [17]. Nemerteans are among the first acoelomates to be brought together with coelomates, providing the ground for the 'new view' of animal phylogeny [18]. Meanwhile further molecular analyses came up with diverse hypotheses for their phylogenetic position. Depending on datasets and methods used for phylogenetic inference the propsed sister group of Nemertea was Platyzoa [19], Mollusca [13,20,21], Molluca + Annelida (= Neotrochozoa) [22,23]. Recent approaches with large datasets from EST libraries added another hypothesis: in the phylogenetic analyses of Dunn et al. [12] and Helmkampf et al. [24] Nemertea cluster with Brachiopoda and Phoronida. Animal mitochondrial genomes provide a large set of orthologous sequence data which are often used in phylogenetic analyses from population to phylum level. In addition to sequence information several other features are used to support phylogenetic hypotheses, e.g. gene order rearrangements, derived secondary structure of rRNAs and tRNAs, changes in genetic code (for a review see [25]). Mitochondrial gene order data had an early impact on formation of the Lophotrochozoa hypothesis: Stechmann and Schlegel [26] demonstrated a highly similar gene order when comparing the brachiopod Terebratulina retusa and the mollusc Katharina tunicata, giving a strong argument in favour of the Lophotrochozoa hypothesis. The main difference between the two species is one big inversion covering about half of the entire genome. Gene order of the partial mitochondrial genome from the nemertean Cephalothrix rufifrons is not much different from that of Katharina and Terebratulina [20]. In this study we present the first complete mitochondrial genome record for a member of the Nemertea, Lineus viridis. We use mitochondrial gene order and sequence data to evaluate the phylogenetic position of Nemertea. Furthermore, we discuss mitochondrial gene order data among Lophotrochozoa and conclude that specific inversions may have occurred independently in different taxa, probably providing a rare example of homoplasious change of gene order.

Results and Discussion

General features of the mitochondrial genome of Lineus viridis

All 37 genes usually present in bilaterian animals are found in the mitochondrial genome of L. viridis (GenBank accession number FJ839919). All protein-coding and ribosomal RNA genes, as well as all but two tRNA genes (trnP, trnT) are found on the same strand, therefore defined as plus-strand (Table 1, Figure 1). This preference of one strand is also found in other lophotrochozoan taxa (Annelida, Brachiopoda, Acanthocephala, Platyhelminthes) [27], as well as in Tunicata [28]. The size of the genome (15388 bp) is well in the range of other lophotrochozoans [27]. The complete genome has an AT content of 65.8%, which is not significantly different from other Lophotrochozoa like Lumbricus terrestris (62%, [29]), Katharina tunicata (69%, [30]) or Terebratulina retusa (57%, [26]). Plus-strand shows a strong GC-skew (0.306) and AT-skew (-0.352), as the nucleotide composition is clearly biased towards G and T (A: 21.3%, C: 11.9%, G: 22.4%, T: 44.4%).
Table 1

Genome organisation of Lineus viridis (complete length: 15388 bp).

GeneStrandPosition(start – end)Length(nuc.)GC-skewStart-codonStop-codonIntergenic nucleotides
cox1+1 – 153315330.236ATGTAG1
trnW+1535 – 1599651
cox2+1601 – 22876870.311ATGTAA2
trnD+2290 – 2353641
atp8+2355 – 25131590.367ATGTA18
atp6+2532 – 32246930.350ATGTAG24
trnC+3249 – 3310621
trnM+3312 – 337665*
rrnS (12S)*+3377 – 42098330.254*
trnV+4210 – 427566*
rrnL (16S)*+4276 – 558013050.322*
trnL-CUN+5581 – 5649696
trnL-UUR+5656 – 57216698
nad1+5820 – 67509310.295ATGT2
trnY+6753 – 6818660
trnP-6819 – 68836512
nad6+6896 – 73544590.446ATGTAG2
cob+7357 – 849111350.230ATGT0
trnS-UCN+8492 – 8559684
trnT-8564 – 8628655
nad4L+8634 – 89423090.505ATGTAA-7
nad4+8936 – 1028713520.327ATGTAA-1
trnH+10287 – 10351652
nad5+10354 – 1208617330.377ATGTA0
trnE+12087 – 12149636
trnG+12156 – 12219640
cox3+12220 – 129997800.272ATGTAA14
trnK+13014 – 13082692
trnA+13085 – 131506611
trnF+13162 – 13225643
trnQ+13229 – 13296682
trnR+13299 – 13356582
trnN+13359 – 134246627
trnI+13452 – 13519682
nad3+13522 – 138873660.407ATGTAG415
Major NCR*13888 – 143024150.210*
trnS-AGN+14303 – 1437270-1
nad2+14372 – 1538810170.365ATGTAA0

* start and stop position of ribosomal RNA and NCR according to adjacent gene boundaries

Figure 1

Circular map of the mitochondrial genome of . tRNA genes are represented by their corresponding amino acid one letter abbreviation. Except trnT and trnP all genes are on the same strand and are oriented (5'-3') in clockwise manner. Numbers (+/-) depict noncoding nucleotides between genes or overlapping nucleotides, respectively. The stem-loop structure is annotated minus-strand like, to show signal sequences (boxed) similar to that found in arthropod control region. The depicted region correspondes to c14260 – c14150 of the GenBank record.

Circular map of the mitochondrial genome of . tRNA genes are represented by their corresponding amino acid one letter abbreviation. Except trnT and trnP all genes are on the same strand and are oriented (5'-3') in clockwise manner. Numbers (+/-) depict noncoding nucleotides between genes or overlapping nucleotides, respectively. The stem-loop structure is annotated minus-strand like, to show signal sequences (boxed) similar to that found in arthropod control region. The depicted region correspondes to c14260 – c14150 of the GenBank record. Genome organisation of Lineus viridis (complete length: 15388 bp). * start and stop position of ribosomal RNA and NCR according to adjacent gene boundaries A total of 676 non-coding nucleotides is found in the mt genome, comprising about 4.4% of the complete sequence. The major non-coding region is found between nad3 and trnS(SGN)/nad2, and has a slightly higher AT content (68.8%) than the remaining genome. Other lophotrochozoans with a similar gene order as Lineus (including the nemertean Cephalothrix rufifrons, [20]) do not have a non-coding sequence at that position. Near the 3'-end there is a 67 bp segment having the potential of forming a stem-loop structure. Figure 1 shows this structure and flanking sequences in minus-strand annotation, to show the flanking regions with putative signal sequences similar to that described from arthropod control regions [31,32]. The second-largest non-coding part is found between trnL(UUR) and nad1 (98 bp), which has a higher AT content than other parts of the genome (74.5%). Other non-coding regions >10 bp are found between atp6 and trnC (24 bp), trnY and trnP (12 bp), trnG and cox3 (14 bp), trnA and trnF (11 bp) and trnR and trnN (27 bp). Between nad4 and trnH there seems to be an overlap of 10 nucleotides.

Protein-coding genes and rRNAs

All protein-coding genes use exclusively ATG as start codon, while stop codon TAA (5×) and TAG (4×) are used almost equally often (Table 1). Four genes have incomplete stop codons (TA-, T-), a feature often found in animal mitochondrial genomes. Incomplete stop codons are probably subject to post-transcriptional polyadenylation [33]. All protein-coding genes are encoded on the plus-strand and show a positive GC-skew, ranging from 0.236 in cox1 to 0.505 in nad4L. There is a trend for higher GC-skew in usually less conserved sequences like nad3, nad4, nad5, compared to more conserved genes like cox1-3, cob. The two ribosomal RNA genes (16S, 12S) are similar in length to those from other lophotrochozoan taxa, and as in many bilaterians, both are separated by trnV.

Transfer RNAs

The set of 22 tRNA genes typical for Bilateria were found in the mitochondrial genome of Lineus viridis (Figure 2). 21 of them can be folded into the typical cloverleaf secondary structure. The cloverleaf structure of tRNA-Ser(AGN) misses the DHU-arm, which is missing in most metazoan species, and is probably lost early in animal evolution [34]. A few mismatches are found in the acceptor stem of tRNA-His, tRNA-Lys, tRNA-Leu(UUR), and tRNA-Phe, as well as in the anticodon stem of tRNA-Glu and tRNA-Leu(CUN).
Figure 2

Putative secondary structures of the 22 tRNAs identified in the mitochondrial genome of .

Putative secondary structures of the 22 tRNAs identified in the mitochondrial genome of .

Mitochondrial gene order in Lophotrochozoa

Gene order is not conserved in Nemertea, as the partial mt genome of Cephalothrix rufifrons [20] and the complete mt genome of Lineus viridis presented here differ in the position of nad6 and five tRNA genes (Figure 3). We assume that Cephalothrix shows the more derived condition among Nemertea, as the adjacency of nad6 and cob is very common in lophotrochozoan and also arthropod mitochondrial genomes. Therefore the condition nad1-nad6-cob, as observed in Lineus is likely the plesiomorphic state in Nemertea. As well the relative positions of most of the tRNA genes are conserved in Lineus and other non-nemertean taxa. The only exception is trnF, which is in a derived position in Lineus and in the ancestral position in Cephalothrix. Lineus is a member of the Heteronemertea, while Cephalothrix is a member of the Palaeonemertea, a group which is thought to be the sister group to the remaining Nemertea [35] and which has many ancestral characters compared to other Nemertea. It is another example of the fact that a taxon showing ancestral states for many characters may as well show derived states in other character complexes.
Figure 3

Mitochondrial gene order of Nemertea and selected lophotrochozoan species. Colour coded genes show different positions from that seen in Lineus viridis, according to transpositions (green) or inversions (yellow, orange). The yellow inversion is a potential synapomorphy. tRNA genes are abbreviated by their amino acids (one letter code). Upper genes are plus-strand encoded, lower genes are minus-strand encoded. Gene orders according to the following references: Cephalothrix [20], Terebratulina [26], Ilyanassa [38], Katharina [30], Phoronis [42], Entoprocta [43].

Mitochondrial gene order of Nemertea and selected lophotrochozoan species. Colour coded genes show different positions from that seen in Lineus viridis, according to transpositions (green) or inversions (yellow, orange). The yellow inversion is a potential synapomorphy. tRNA genes are abbreviated by their amino acids (one letter code). Upper genes are plus-strand encoded, lower genes are minus-strand encoded. Gene orders according to the following references: Cephalothrix [20], Terebratulina [26], Ilyanassa [38], Katharina [30], Phoronis [42], Entoprocta [43]. Gene order of Lineus viridis is very similar to that of some other lophotrochozoan taxa. Most of the differences between lophotrochozoan taxa concern translocations of tRNA genes, which seem to be more "mobile" than the larger genes [32,36]. Analysis of relative positions of tRNA genes yielded no phylogenetic informative character (data not shown), so we focused on the relative positions of the protein-coding and rRNA genes. Their gene order is identical in Lineus, the brachiopod Terebratulina retusa [26], and some gastropods, e.g. Conus textile [37], Ilyanassa obsoleta [38], Thais clavigera (GenBank NC_010090), and Lophiotoma cerithiformis [39]. Turbeville and Smith [20] also analysed mitochondrial gene order of a partial genome of the nemertean Cephalothrix rufifrons. Their gene adjacency analyses clustered Cephalothrix with molluscs, preferentially Haliotis, but the brachiopod Terebratulina was missing in their analyses. Other molluscs like the gastropod Haliotis rubra [40], the polyplacophoran Katharina tunicata [26] and the cephalopod Octopus vulgaris [41] show a similar gene order, but distinguished by a large inversion of about half the mt genome (Figure 3). The segment spanning from trnF to trnE (adjacent to the control region) is found in opposite direction than the remainder of the genome. Due to the broader distribution among Mollusca (Polyplacophora, Gastropoda, Cephalopoda) it is most parsimonious to assume the gene order of Katharina and Octopus (= with inversion) to be ancient within molluscs and to interpret gene order in the gastropods Conus, Ilyanassa and Thais to be secondarily re-inverted (other molluscs like Scaphopoda and Bivalvia show strongly derived gene orders compared to the mentioned species). Besides molluscs a similar inversion is seen in the mt genome of Phoronis psammophila [42] and, secondarily complicated by another inversion, in the Entoprocts Loxosomella and Loxocorone [43]. This inversion may be a synapomorphy of Phoronida + Entoprocta + Mollusca. However, there is no good support from sequence based analyses for a clade combining exclusively these three taxa (see below). Furthermore, an inversion similar to that described for Lophotrochozoa is found in Ecdysozoa, comparing arthropod and priapulid gene order [8]. Thus there is also reason to suspect some parts of the genome to be more often involved in rearrangements than others. In particular the mitochondrial control region may represent a region with "predetermined breaking points" in the mitochondrial genome, as there is non-coding sequence and no functional gene will be disrupted by a breakpoint. Besides its position the second breaking point cannot be further characterized by now. As there is a re-inversion in some gastropods, we cannot exclude that this inversion took place independently two or three times in Phoronida, Mollusca and Entoprocta. Nonetheless, it is reasonable to assume that the basal condition in Bilateria or at least Lophotrochozoa is to have all genes on the same strand – this is actually seen in Brachiopoda, Annelida, Platyhelminthes and Acanthocephalans.

Phylogenetic analysis (of mitochondrial amino acid sequences)

For phylogenetic analyses concatenated amino acid alignments from twelve mitochondrial protein-coding genes (all but the short and less conserved atp8) were built and analyzed by maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods. For a preliminary analysis a taxon set of 104 metazoan species was chosen. Seven species from Porifera and Cnidaria served as outgroup for rooting the Bilaterian tree. This large taxon set was analysed with a maximum likelihood approach (RAxML) and the best topology was tested by bootstrapping (Figure 4). Bilateria is split into three large clades: (1) Deuterostomia + Xenoturbella, (2) Arthropoda + Onychophora + Priapulida, (3) Lophotrochozoa with some long-branching taxa from other groups, prominently Nematoda. While many other molecular datasets favour Ecdysozoa hypothesis, thus a position of Nematoda with Arthropoda and Priapulida, our result seems to be artificial due to long-branch attraction. In our analysis Nematoda, Platyhelminthes, Syndermata and some subtaxa of Mollusca have the longest branches of all taxa and cluster together. Molluscan polyphyly is another strange effect of this problem. In the large dataset Nemertea are found to be sister group to short-branched taxa of Mollusca (a polyplacophoran, two gastropods and two cephalopods), with a bootstrap support of 88%. Other gastropod species and Bivalvia are found near the long-branching taxa of Nematoda, Syndermata and Platyhelmithes. Basal splits among Lophotrochozoa do not exceed moderate support in bootstrap analysis.
Figure 4

Best tree from maximum likelihood analysis (RAxML, mtRev+G+I) with the 104 taxa dataset (concatenated amino acid alignments). Numbers indicate bootstrap percentages (>50%). Thick lines for clades indicate bootstrap support of at least 85%. Dotted lines depict taxa appearing as polyphyletic in our analysis. Scale bar depicts substitutions per site. For complete species names and accession numbers of GenBank entries see Additional file 1. Asterisks indicate taxa with incomplete mt genome records.

Best tree from maximum likelihood analysis (RAxML, mtRev+G+I) with the 104 taxa dataset (concatenated amino acid alignments). Numbers indicate bootstrap percentages (>50%). Thick lines for clades indicate bootstrap support of at least 85%. Dotted lines depict taxa appearing as polyphyletic in our analysis. Scale bar depicts substitutions per site. For complete species names and accession numbers of GenBank entries see Additional file 1. Asterisks indicate taxa with incomplete mt genome records. For more sophisticated analyses we used a smaller dataset of 26 lophotrochozoan species and four outgroup members from Deuterostomia and Ecdysozoa. We omitted Platyhelminthes, Nematoda, Syndermata and some of the molluscan taxa with long branches. As well we did not use sequences from Chaetognatha, due to their uncertain relation to Lophotrochozoa and we ignored sequences from the molluscs Albinaria, Aplysia, Biomphalaria, which did not cluster with the other molluscs in the first analysis. The best tree obtained by RAxML with mtRev+G+I (Figure 5) found the two nemertean species as sister group to the polyplacophoran mollusc Katharina tunicata, but without bootstrap support exceeding 50%. Thus, Mollusca again are not monophyletic under these parameters. The best tree from Treefinder analysis (Figure 6) with a model specified for lophotrochozoan taxa (mtZoa+G+I [44]) has a different topology, with Entoprocta being sister group to Nemertea, with moderate support from resampling analysis (edge support by LR-ELW: 88%). The five molluscan species form a monophylum with 91% edge support and are sister to the nemertean/entoprocta clade (LR-ELW: 66%). Phoronis is sister to that assemblage. The rest of the tree is similar to the RAxML tree. The best tree from Treefinder analysis with the mtRev+G+I (topology not shown, LR-ELW in Figure 6) model differs from that with mtZoa+G+I only in the position of Myzostoma as sister group to Ectoprocta. Here, support from LR-ELW for the Nemertea+Entoprocta relationship is 78%. The best tree of a Bayesian analysis (mtRev+G+I, topology not shown, BPP in Figure 6) of the same dataset resulted in a taxon combining Entoprocta and Phoronis as sister group to Nemertea (BPP: 1.0). Here, Mollusca is monophyletic (BPP: 0.96), while Myzostoma clustered with Ectoprocta (BPP: 1.0) instead of annelids as in the shown trees. The remaining tree topology is the same as in the Treefinder-mtZoa analysis. All four analyses favour a clade combining Phoronida, Entoprocta, Nemertea and Mollusca (RAxML/mtRev: 87%, Treefinder/mtZoa: 98%, Treefinder/mtRev: 98%, MrBayes/mtRev: 1.0). AU test of the RAxML analyses with constrained trees (Table 2) rejects the hypotheses of sister group relationships Nemertea+Annelida or Nemertea+Brachiopoda. Mollusca, Phoronida and Entoprocta cannot be excluded as possible sister groups to Nemertea according to that test.
Figure 5

Best tree from maximum likelihood analysis (RAxML, mtRev+G+I) with the 30 taxa dataset (concatenated amino acid alignments). Numbers indicate bootstrap percentage (RAxML, mtRev+G+I). Thick lines for clades indicate bootstrap support of at least 85%. Dotted lines depict taxa appearing as polyphyletic in our analysis. Scale bar depicts substitutions per site. For complete species names and accession numbers of GenBank entries see [Additional file 1]. Asterisks indicate taxa with incomplete mt genome records.

Figure 6

Best tree from maximum likelihood analysis (Treefinder, mtZoa+G+I) with the 30 taxa dataset (concatenated amino acid alignments). Numbers next to nodes reflect edge support percentage (= LR-ELW) from Treefinder with mtZoa+G+I model (left or upper number), edge support percentage from Treefinder with mtRev+G+I model (middle number) and Bayesian posterior probability (BPP, mtRev+G+I, right or lower number). In the best tree of Treefinder with mtRev+G+I model Myzostoma clustered with Ectoprocta (edge support: 51%). The best tree from Bayesian analysis favoured another topology: Nemertea are sister group to Phoronida+Entoprocta (BPP: 1.0) and Myzostoma clustered with Ectoprocta (BPP: 1.0). Thick lines for clades indicate a combination of edge support above 85% and BPP above 0.95. Scale bar depicts substitutions per site. For complete species names and GenBank accession numbers see Additional file 1. Asterisks indicate taxa with incomplete mt genome records.

Table 2

Hypothesis testing using the 30 taxa datset and constrained user trees.

TreeLog MLAU test
Best tree (Nemertea, Mollusca)-155485.3297850.627
(Nemertea, Entoprocta)-155486.8667020.538
(Nemertea, Phoronis)-155487.3743720.439
(Mollusca, Phoronis)-155505.6656870.065
(Phoronis, Brachiopoda, Entoprocta)-155519.0336040.030
(Phoronis, Brachiopoda)-155530.8370970.019
(Annelida, Mollusca)-155558.1593180.008
(Nemertea, Brachiopoda)-155563.6721640.001
(Nemertea, Annelida)-155577.7074141e-004
Best tree from maximum likelihood analysis (RAxML, mtRev+G+I) with the 30 taxa dataset (concatenated amino acid alignments). Numbers indicate bootstrap percentage (RAxML, mtRev+G+I). Thick lines for clades indicate bootstrap support of at least 85%. Dotted lines depict taxa appearing as polyphyletic in our analysis. Scale bar depicts substitutions per site. For complete species names and accession numbers of GenBank entries see [Additional file 1]. Asterisks indicate taxa with incomplete mt genome records. Best tree from maximum likelihood analysis (Treefinder, mtZoa+G+I) with the 30 taxa dataset (concatenated amino acid alignments). Numbers next to nodes reflect edge support percentage (= LR-ELW) from Treefinder with mtZoa+G+I model (left or upper number), edge support percentage from Treefinder with mtRev+G+I model (middle number) and Bayesian posterior probability (BPP, mtRev+G+I, right or lower number). In the best tree of Treefinder with mtRev+G+I model Myzostoma clustered with Ectoprocta (edge support: 51%). The best tree from Bayesian analysis favoured another topology: Nemertea are sister group to Phoronida+Entoprocta (BPP: 1.0) and Myzostoma clustered with Ectoprocta (BPP: 1.0). Thick lines for clades indicate a combination of edge support above 85% and BPP above 0.95. Scale bar depicts substitutions per site. For complete species names and GenBank accession numbers see Additional file 1. Asterisks indicate taxa with incomplete mt genome records. Hypothesis testing using the 30 taxa datset and constrained user trees. Dunn et al. [12], analysing a large EST dataset, found Entoprocta as sister group to the remaining taxa Mollusca, Annelida, Phoronida, Brachiopoda and Nemertea. Nemerteans are found to be sister group to Brachiopoda in one of their analyses, and sister group to a clade combining Brachiopoda and Phoronida in the second analysis (with a slightly reduced taxon set). The latter assemblage found support in some of their parameter settings. Here, Annelida sensu lato were the sister group of Nemertea, Brachiopoda and Phoronida, but only with moderate support. Struck & Fisse [13] found good support for Mollusca+Nemertea in Bayesian analyses of an amino acid alignment derived from EST data, while ML analyses were rather indifferent between Annelida and Mollusca as sister group to Nemertea. But these analyses did not include phoronid and brachiopod species. A partial mitochondrial genome of another nemertean species, Cephalothrix rufifrons, was previously published [20]. The corresponding phylogenetic analyses favoured an affinity to molluscs, which appeared paraphyletic in that study.

Conclusion

Phylogenetic analyses of available mitochondrial sequence data (concatenated amino acid sequences) do not clearly resolve lophotrochozoan interrelationships, but favour a clade combining Nemertea, Mollusca, Phoronida and Entoprocta on one hand, Brachiopoda, Ectoprocta, Annelida, Sipuncula and Myzostomida on the other. Recent large analyses of EST datasets with similar taxon sampling came to other results. Mitochondrial gene order is very similar in Nemertea, some brachiopods and some molluscs, suggesting a shared ground pattern at least for a lophotrochozoan subtaxon. Phoronid and entoproct gene order is easily derivable from this ground pattern, while gene order of annelids and ectoprocts seems to be strongly derived, also in comparison to gene order of outgroup taxa from Ecdysozoa and Deuterostomia. In conclusion, none of the recent molecular based studies (mitochondrial genomes, EST approaches) found support for a relationship between Nemertea and Platyhelmithes, but the sister group to Nemertea remains an open question with more evidence for the candidates Mollusca, Phoronida, Entoprocta, Brachiopoda and less evidence for Annelida.

Methods

Animal samples and DNA extraction

Specimen of Lineus viridis were sampled on the island Sylt and fixed in 99.8% ethanol. DNA extraction was done with DNeasy Blood and Tissue kits (Qiagen, Hilden, Germany) according to manufacturers protocol for animal tissue.

PCR and sequencing

Several standard PCR primer sets were tested to yield fragments of mitochondrial genes. Amplification was successful with the following primers: cox1: LCO-1490, 5'-GGT CAA CAA ATC ATA AAG ATA TTG G-3'; HCO-2198, 5'-TAA ACT TCA GGG TGA CCA AAA AAT CA-3' [45]; 16S: 16SarL, 5'-CGC CTG TTT AAC AAA AAC AT-3'; 16SbrH, 5'-CCG GTC TGA ACT CAG ATC ACG T-3' [46]. All PCRs were performed on Eppendorf Mastercycler and Mastercycler gradient. In these short-range PCR experiments Eppendorf 5-prime-Taq kit (Eppendorf, Germany) was used in 50 μl volumes (5 μl buffer; 1 μl dNTP mix, 10 μM; 0.25 μl Taq polymerase; 1 μl DNA, 40.75 μl water, 1 μl primer mix, 10 μM each). PCR products were purified using the Nucleospin kit (Macherey & Nagel). PCR conditions were: initial denaturation (94°C, 1 min), 40 cycles of denaturation (94°C, 30 sec), annealing (50°C, 30 sec), and elongation (68°C, 1 min), followed by a final elongation step (68°C, 1 min). These PCR products were sequenced using the Beckman-Coulter CEQ 8000 machine and DTCS kit (Beckman-Coulter) following the manufacturers protocol, except for using 10 μl volumes instead of 20 μl for the sequencing reaction. These initial sequences along with mitochondrial sequences from an EST library generated by one of the authors [13,46] were used to design long-range PCR primers covering the complete mitochondrial genome of Lineus viridis. PCR was successfully performed with the primer sets Lv-cox1r (5'-CCA GTA CCA ACC AAA CCA GAC C-3')/Lv-16Sf (5'-AAA AGA TTG CGA CCT CGA TGT T-3) and Lv-16Sf (5'-AAA AGA TTG CGA CCT CGA TGT-3')/Lv-cox1r (5'-CCA GTA CCA ACC AAA CCA GAC C-3'). Long-range PCR was done with Takara LA Taq kit (Takara, distributed in Germany by MoBiTec) in 50 μl Volumes (34.5 μl water; 5 μl PCR buffer; 8 μl dNTP mix; 0.5 μl LA Taq; 1 μl primer-mix, 20 μM; 1 μl DNA). PCR conditions were: initial denaturation (94°C, 1 min), 40 cycles of denaturation (94°C, 30 sec), annealing (55°C, 1 min), and elongation (65°C, 12 min), followed by a final elongation step (65°C, 10 min). Long-range PCR products were purified using the Nucleospin kit (Macherey & Nagel) and subsequently used for a shotgun cloning approach (done in commission by Max Planck Institute of Molecular Genetics, Berlin).

Sequence assemblage and annotation

Sequences were assembled using Bioedit [47]. Detection and annotation of tRNA genes was done making use of ARWEN [48] and tRNA scan SE [49]. Protein-coding and rRNA genes were firstly identified by BLAST search, then gene boundaries were detected in comparison with alignments of several lophotrochozoan taxa. Nucleotide composition was computed using Bioedit and GC- and AT-skew was determined by using the formulation of Perna and Kocher [50].

Phylogenetic analysis

For phylogenetic analysis a concatenated dataset of mitochondrial amino acid alignments from 12 genes was built. The gene atp8 was excluded from the analysis, due to the fact that it is missing from many genomes (nematodes, platyhelminthes, chaetognaths), and that it is the smallest and least conserved of the protein-coding genes. Sequence data from 104 species, most of them with complete mt genome entries were retrieved from GenBank, for accession numbers see Additional file 1. Alignments were done with ClustalW [51] as implemented in Bioedit [47]. For the large dataset non-conserved sites were excluded from likelihood analyses making use of the Gblocks software [52], with the following parameter settings: minimum number of sequences for a conserved position: 55; minimum number of sequences for a flanking position: 55; maximum number of contiguous nonconserved positions: 8; minimum length of a block: 10; allowed gap positions: with half. In this case 2294 amino acid sites (= 49%) were recovered from the original dataset of 4654 amino acids. For maximum likelihood analysis, we used RAxML 7.0.4 [53,54] as offered on the CIPRES web portal. We choose mtRev+G+I, because mtRev was the only model derived from mitochondrial data available on this platform. We performed a search for the best tree and 100 bootstrap replicates. For more sophisticated analyses we chose a smaller dataset focussed on Lophotrochozoa (26 species) and using four species of Ecdysozoa and Deuterostomia representing the outgroup to Lophotrochozoa. Due to the better conservation among the alignments we used the complete alignments of twelve protein-coding genes and built a concatenated alignment with a final length of 3820 amino acids. We used this smaller dataset to test different models in maximum likelihood analysis (mtRev, mtZoa), run a Bayesian analysis and performed hypothesis testing of alternative topologies. With the smaller dataset a partitioned model optimization was done in that we partitioned the dataset according to the 12 genes. Besides RAxML with mtRev+G+I (100 bootstrap runs) we used Treefinder v. Oct 2008 [55] to perform a maximum likelihood analysis with mtRev+G+I and the self implemented mtZoa+G+I model (each with LR-ELW, 1000 replications). The mtZoa model is optimzed for amino acid alignments from lophotrochozoan taxa [44]. In all likelihood analyses, models were the same for each partition but optimized in an unlinked manner between the partitions. In addition a Bayesian analysis was performed with MrBayes 3.1.2 [56]. 1,000,000 generations of two times four parallel chains were run, by sampling one tree out of thousand. According to the log likelihood plots 200 trees were discarded as burnin. Model settings were mtRev+G+I (unpartitioned due to time limitations). Hypothesis testing was done by computing best trees and per site likelihoods with RAxML (mtRev+G+I) for a set of constrained trees. Per site likelihoods were used to perform the AU-test [57], by making use of CONSEL 0.1j [58].

Abbreviations

A: adenine; atp6 and 8: genes encoding ATPase subunit 6 and 8; AU test: approximately unbiased test; BI: Bayesian inference; bp: base pairs; BPP: Bayesian posterior probability; cox1-3: genes encoding cytochrome oxidase subunits I-III; cob: gene encoding cytochrome b; C: cytosine; G: guanine; LR-ELW: edge support, local rearrangements (LR) around an edge of the best tree topology are analyzed for expected likelihood weights (ELW), yielding an approximation of the bootstrap value; ML: maximum likelihood; mt genome: mitochondrial genome; nad1-6 and nad4L: genes encoding NADH dehydrogenase subunits 1-6 and 4L; PCR: polymerase chain reaction; rRNA: ribosomal RNA; rrnL: large (16S) rRNA subunit (gene); rrnS: small (12S) rRNA subunit (gene); T: thymine; tRNA-Xyz (where Xyz is replaced by three letter amino acid code of the corresponding amino acid): transfer RNA; trnX (where X is replaced by one letter amino acid code of the corresponding amino acid), tRNA gene;

Authors' contributions

LP conducted most of the PCR and sequencing experiments, annotation and phylogenetic analysis and wrote the main body of the manuscript. THS provided EST-sequences, and took part in discussion and manuscript writing. JD sampled and reared animals and performed DNA extraction and initial PCR experiments. AB provided substantial support in sequencing and phylogenetic analysis. TB was involved in discussion and manuscript writing. All authors read and approved the final manuscript.

Additional file 1

Accession numbers. Click here for file
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Authors:  Alexandros Stamatakis
Journal:  Bioinformatics       Date:  2006-08-23       Impact factor: 6.937

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Authors:  Martin Helmkampf; Iris Bruchhaus; Bernhard Hausdorf
Journal:  Mol Phylogenet Evol       Date:  2007-09-12       Impact factor: 4.286

5.  Broad phylogenomic sampling improves resolution of the animal tree of life.

Authors:  Casey W Dunn; Andreas Hejnol; David Q Matus; Kevin Pang; William E Browne; Stephen A Smith; Elaine Seaver; Greg W Rouse; Matthias Obst; Gregory D Edgecombe; Martin V Sørensen; Steven H D Haddock; Andreas Schmidt-Rhaesa; Akiko Okusu; Reinhardt Møbjerg Kristensen; Ward C Wheeler; Mark Q Martindale; Gonzalo Giribet
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2008-03-05       Impact factor: 49.962

6.  Spiralian phylogenomics supports the resurrection of Bryozoa comprising Ectoprocta and Entoprocta.

Authors:  Bernhard Hausdorf; Martin Helmkampf; Achim Meyer; Alexander Witek; Holger Herlyn; Iris Bruchhaus; Thomas Hankeln; Torsten H Struck; Bernhard Lieb
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Authors:  N T Perna; T D Kocher
Journal:  J Mol Evol       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 2.395

9.  Complete sequence of the mitochondrial DNA of the annelid worm Lumbricus terrestris.

Authors:  J L Boore; W M Brown
Journal:  Genetics       Date:  1995-09       Impact factor: 4.562

10.  DNA primers for amplification of mitochondrial cytochrome c oxidase subunit I from diverse metazoan invertebrates.

Authors:  O Folmer; M Black; W Hoeh; R Lutz; R Vrijenhoek
Journal:  Mol Mar Biol Biotechnol       Date:  1994-10
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Authors:  Wen-Yan Sun; Shi-Chun Sun
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2014-06-18       Impact factor: 2.316

2.  A comparative study of nemertean complete mitochondrial genomes, including two new ones for Nectonemertes cf. mirabilis and Zygeupolia rubens, may elucidate the fundamental pattern for the phylum Nemertea.

Authors:  Hai-Xia Chen; Shi-Chun Sun; Per Sundberg; Wei-Cheng Ren; Jon L Norenburg
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2012-04-17       Impact factor: 3.969

3.  The mitochondrial genomes of two nemerteans, Cephalothrix sp. (Nemertea: Palaeonemertea) and Paranemertes cf. peregrina (Nemertea: Hoplonemertea).

Authors:  Hai-Xia Chen; Per Sundberg; Hai-Yi Wu; Shi-Chun Sun
Journal:  Mol Biol Rep       Date:  2010-12-05       Impact factor: 2.316

4.  Molecular evolution of cyclin proteins in animals and fungi.

Authors:  Konstantin V Gunbin; Valentin V Suslov; Igor I Turnaev; Dmitry A Afonnikov; Nikolay A Kolchanov
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2011-07-28       Impact factor: 3.260

5.  Lophotrochozoan neuroanatomy: An analysis of the brain and nervous system of Lineus viridis(Nemertea) using different staining techniques.

Authors:  Patrick Beckers; Simone Faller; Rudi Loesel
Journal:  Front Zool       Date:  2011-07-19       Impact factor: 3.172

6.  The complete mitochondrial genome of Flustra foliacea (Ectoprocta, Cheilostomata) - compositional bias affects phylogenetic analyses of lophotrochozoan relationships.

Authors:  Maximilian P Nesnidal; Martin Helmkampf; Iris Bruchhaus; Bernhard Hausdorf
Journal:  BMC Genomics       Date:  2011-11-23       Impact factor: 3.969

7.  Mutation and selection cause codon usage and bias in mitochondrial genomes of ribbon worms (Nemertea).

Authors:  Haixia Chen; Shichun Sun; Jon L Norenburg; Per Sundberg
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-15       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  The mitochondrial genomes of the mesozoans Intoshia linei, Dicyema sp. and Dicyema japonicum.

Authors:  Helen E Robertson; Philipp H Schiffer; Maximilian J Telford
Journal:  Parasitol Open       Date:  2018-08-02

9.  Cnidarian phylogenetic relationships as revealed by mitogenomics.

Authors:  Ehsan Kayal; Béatrice Roure; Hervé Philippe; Allen G Collins; Dennis V Lavrov
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2013-01-09       Impact factor: 3.260

10.  Transcriptome data reveal Syndermatan relationships and suggest the evolution of endoparasitism in Acanthocephala via an epizoic stage.

Authors:  Alexandra R Wey-Fabrizius; Holger Herlyn; Benjamin Rieger; David Rosenkranz; Alexander Witek; David B Mark Welch; Ingo Ebersberger; Thomas Hankeln
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-02-10       Impact factor: 3.240

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