Literature DB >> 2385174

Phylogenetic relationships of the pipid frogs Xenopus and Silurana: an integration of ribosomal DNA and morphology.

R O de Sá1, D M Hillis.   

Abstract

Relationships of the pipid frog genus Silurana (= Xenopus tropicalis group of some authors) are of particular interest to developmental and molecular biologists because of the purported ancestral (i.e., unduplicated) karyotype of S. tropicalis relative to the genus Xenopus. Although most previous studies have assumed that Silurana is the sister group of Xenopus, recent morphological work suggests that Silurana is more closely related both to the South American genus Pipa and to the African genera Hymenochirus and Pseudhymenochirus than it is to Xenopus. We examined 1,486 bp of relatively variable regions of the ribosomal DNA array (including portions of the 18S and 28S genes, as well as part of an internal transcribed spacer) in Hymenochirus, Silurana, and Xenopus, as well as the outgroup genus Spea, in order to test the alternative hypotheses of relationships for Silurana. Maximum-parsimony analysis using bootstrapping and an analysis using Lake's method of invariants both significantly support the sister-group relationship between Xenopus and Silurana rather than the relationship suggested by morphology. Analysis of the combined morphological/molecular data matrix also significantly supports the Xenopus-Silurana relationship. Although our results are not inconsistent with the recognition of the genus Silurana to accommodate the species formerly called X. tropicalis and X. epitropicalis, the proposed relationships do not require the recognition of this genus in order to render Xenopus monophyletic.

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Year:  1990        PMID: 2385174     DOI: 10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a040612

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  8 in total

1.  Pelvic and thigh musculature in frogs (Anura) and origin of anuran jumping locomotion.

Authors:  Tomás Prikryl; Peter Aerts; Pavla Havelková; Anthony Herrel; Zbynek Rocek
Journal:  J Anat       Date:  2009-01       Impact factor: 2.610

Review 2.  Implications of ancient DNA for phylogenetic studies.

Authors:  R DeSalle
Journal:  Experientia       Date:  1994-06-15

3.  Sequencing and analysis of 10,967 full-length cDNA clones from Xenopus laevis and Xenopus tropicalis reveals post-tetraploidization transcriptome remodeling.

Authors:  Ryan D Morin; Elbert Chang; Anca Petrescu; Nancy Liao; Malachi Griffith; William Chow; Robert Kirkpatrick; Yaron S Butterfield; Alice C Young; Jeffrey Stott; Sarah Barber; Ryan Babakaiff; Mark C Dickson; Corey Matsuo; David Wong; George S Yang; Duane E Smailus; Keith D Wetherby; Peggy N Kwong; Jane Grimwood; Charles P Brinkley; Mabel Brown-John; Natalie D Reddix-Dugue; Michael Mayo; Jeremy Schmutz; Jaclyn Beland; Morgan Park; Susan Gibson; Teika Olson; Gerard G Bouffard; Miranda Tsai; Ruth Featherstone; Steve Chand; Asim S Siddiqui; Wonhee Jang; Ed Lee; Steven L Klein; Robert W Blakesley; Barry R Zeeberg; Sudarshan Narasimhan; John N Weinstein; Christa Prange Pennacchio; Richard M Myers; Eric D Green; Lukas Wagner; Daniela S Gerhard; Marco A Marra; Steven J M Jones; Robert A Holt
Journal:  Genome Res       Date:  2006-05-03       Impact factor: 9.043

4.  Xenopus tropicalis as a model organism for genetics and genomics: past, present, and future.

Authors:  Robert M Grainger
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2012

Review 5.  An amphibian with ambition: a new role for Xenopus in the 21st century.

Authors:  C W Beck; J M Slack
Journal:  Genome Biol       Date:  2001-09-19       Impact factor: 13.583

6.  Chromosome spreading of the (TTAGGG)n repeats in the Pipa carvalhoi Miranda-Ribeiro, 1937 (Pipidae, Anura) karyotype.

Authors:  Michelle Louise Zattera; Luana Lima; Iraine Duarte; Deborah Yasmin de Sousa; Olívia Gabriela Dos Santos Araújo; Thiago Gazoni; Tamí Mott; Shirlei Maria Recco-Pimentel; Daniel Pacheco Bruschi
Journal:  Comp Cytogenet       Date:  2019-10-14       Impact factor: 1.800

7.  Low structural variation in the host-defense peptide repertoire of the dwarf clawed frog Hymenochirus boettgeri (Pipidae).

Authors:  Severine Matthijs; Lumeng Ye; Benoit Stijlemans; Pierre Cornelis; Franky Bossuyt; Kim Roelants
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2014-01-22       Impact factor: 3.240

8.  Comparative description and ossification patterns of Dendropsophus labialis (Peters, 1863) and Scinax ruber (Laurenti, 1758) (Anura: Hylidae).

Authors:  Angélica Arenas-Rodríguez; Julio Mario Hoyos; Juan Francisco Rubiano Vargas
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2018-06-06       Impact factor: 2.984

  8 in total

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