Literature DB >> 21708763

Acanthocephalan phylogeny and the evolution of parasitism.

Thomas J Near1.   

Abstract

The study of parasite evolution relies on the identification of free-living sister taxa of parasitic lineages. Most lineages of parasitic helminths are characterized by an amazing diversity of species that complicates the resolution of phylogenetic relationships. Acanthocephalans offer a potential model system to test various long-standing hypotheses and generalizations regarding the evolution of parasitism in metazoans. The entirely parasitic Acanthocephala have a diversity of species that is manageable with regards to constructing global phylogenetic hypotheses, exhibit variation in hosts and habitats, and are hypothesized to have close phylogenetic affinities to the predominately free-living Rotifera. In this paper, I review and test previous hypotheses of acanthocephalan phylogenetic relationships with analyses of the available 18S rRNA sequence database. Maximum-parsimony and maximum-likelihood inferred trees differ significantly with regard to relationships among acanthocephalans and rotifers. Maximum-parsimony analysis results in a paraphyletic Rotifera, placing a long-branched bdelloid rotifer as the sister taxon of Acanthocephala. Maximum-likelihood analysis results in a monophyletic Rotifera. The difference between the two optimality criteria is attributed to long-branch attraction. The two analyses are congruent in terms of relationships within Acanthocephala. The three sampled classes are monophyletic, and the Archiacanthocephala is the sister taxon of a Palaeacanthocephala + Eoacanthocephala clade. The phylogenetic hypothesis is used to assess the evolution of host and habitat preferences. Acanthocephalan lineages have exhibited multiple radiations into terrestrial habitats and bird and mammal definitive hosts from ancestral aquatic habitats and fish definitive hosts, while exhibiting phylogenetic conservatism in the type of arthropod intermediate host utilized.

Entities:  

Year:  2002        PMID: 21708763     DOI: 10.1093/icb/42.3.668

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Integr Comp Biol        ISSN: 1540-7063            Impact factor:   3.326


  10 in total

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2.  Molecular characterisation of acanthocephalans from Australian marine teleosts: proposal of a new family, synonymy of another and transfer of taxa between orders.

Authors:  Daniel C Huston; Thomas H Cribb; Lesley R Smales
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2020-01-07       Impact factor: 1.431

3.  Morphological and molecular evidence on the existence of a single estuarine and rocky intertidal acanthocephalan species of Profilicollis Meyer, 1931 (Acanthocephala: Polymorphidae) along the Atlantic and Pacific coasts of southern South America.

Authors:  Sara M Rodríguez; Julia I Diaz; Guillermo D'Elía
Journal:  Syst Parasitol       Date:  2017-03-23       Impact factor: 1.431

4.  A new species of Moniliformis from a Sigmodontinae rodent in Patagonia (Argentina).

Authors:  Natalia Beatriz Guerreiro Martins; María Del Rosario Robles; Graciela Teresa Navone
Journal:  Parasitol Res       Date:  2017-06-06       Impact factor: 2.289

5.  Phylogenetic analysis of Pallisentis nagpurensis (Acanthocephala: Quadrigyridae) infecting snakehead murrel Channa striata in Himachal Pradesh, India.

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Journal:  J Parasit Dis       Date:  2021-02-24

6.  168 million years old "marine lice" and the evolution of parasitism within isopods.

Authors:  Christina Nagler; Matúš Hyžný; Joachim T Haug
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7.  Eurotatorian paraphyly: Revisiting phylogenetic relationships based on the complete mitochondrial genome sequence of Rotaria rotatoria (Bdelloidea: Rotifera: Syndermata).

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8.  EST based phylogenomics of Syndermata questions monophyly of Eurotatoria.

Authors:  Alexander Witek; Holger Herlyn; Achim Meyer; Louis Boell; Gregor Bucher; Thomas Hankeln
Journal:  BMC Evol Biol       Date:  2008-12-29       Impact factor: 3.260

9.  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

10.  The Molecular Profile of Paratrajectura Longcementglandatus Amin, Heckmann Et Ali, 2018 (Acanthocephala: Transvenidae) from Percid Fishes in the Marine Waters of Iran and Iraq.

Authors:  M Sharifdini; O M Amin; R A Heckmann
Journal:  Helminthologia       Date:  2020-01-25       Impact factor: 1.184

  10 in total

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