Literature DB >> 28074622

"Holostei versus Halecostomi" Problem: Insight from Cytogenetics of Ancient Nonteleost Actinopterygian Fish, Bowfin Amia calva.

Zuzana Majtánová1,2, Radka Symonová1,3, Lenin Arias-Rodriguez4, Lauren Sallan5, Petr Ráb1.   

Abstract

Bowfin belongs to an ancient lineage of nonteleost ray-finned fishes (actinopterygians) and is the only extant survivor of a once diverged group, the Halecomorphi or Amiiformes. Owing to the scarcity of extant nonteleost ray-finned lineages, also referred as "living fossils," their phylogenetic interrelationships have been the target of multiple hypotheses concerning their sister group relationships. Molecular and morphological data sets have produced controversial results; bowfin is considered as either the sister group to genome-duplicated teleosts (together forming the group of Halecostomi) or to gars (Lepisosteiformes; together forming the group of Holostei). However, any detailed cytogenetic analysis of bowfin chromosomes has never been performed to address this issue. Here we examined bowfin chromosomes by conventional (Giemsa-staining, C-banding, base-specific fluorescence and silver staining) and molecular (FISH with rDNA probes) cytogenetic protocols. We identified diploid chromosome number 2n = 46 with a middle-sized submetacentric chromosome pair as the major ribosomal DNA-bearing (45S rDNA), GC-positive and silver-positive element. The minor rDNA (5S rDNA) sites were localized in the pericentromeric region of one middle-sized acrocentric chromosome pair. Comparison with available cytogenetic data of other nonteleost actinopterygians (bichirs, sturgeons, gars) and teleost species including representative of basally branching lineages showed bowfin chromosomal characteristics more similar to the teleost type than to any other nonteleosts. Particularly striking differences were identified between bowfin and gars, the latter of which were found to mimic mammalian AT/GC genomic organisation. Such conclusion however contradicts the most recent phylogenomic results and raises the question what states are ancestral and what are derived.
© 2017 Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

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Year:  2017        PMID: 28074622     DOI: 10.1002/jez.b.22720

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Exp Zool B Mol Dev Evol        ISSN: 1552-5007            Impact factor:   2.656


  11 in total

1.  Neopterygian phylogeny: the merger assay.

Authors:  Adriana López-Arbarello; Emilia Sferco
Journal:  R Soc Open Sci       Date:  2018-03-21       Impact factor: 2.963

Review 2.  Vertebrate Genome Evolution in the Light of Fish Cytogenomics and rDNAomics.

Authors:  Radka Symonová; W Mike Howell
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2018-02-14       Impact factor: 4.096

3.  Karyotype and chromosomal characteristics of rDNA of Cobitisstrumicae Karaman, 1955 (Teleostei, Cobitidae) from Lake Volvi, Greece.

Authors:  Eva Hnátková; Costas Triantaphyllidis; Catherine Ozouf-Costaz; Zuzana Majtánová; Joerg Bohlen; Petr Ráb
Journal:  Comp Cytogenet       Date:  2018-11-16       Impact factor: 1.800

4.  From Chromosomes to Genome: Insights into the Evolutionary Relationships and Biogeography of Old World Knifefishes (Notopteridae; Osteoglossiformes).

Authors:  Felipe Faix Barby; Petr Ráb; Sébastien Lavoué; Tariq Ezaz; Luiz Antônio Carlos Bertollo; Andrzej Kilian; Sandra Regina Maruyama; Ezequiel Aguiar de Oliveira; Roberto Ferreira Artoni; Mateus Henrique Santos; Oladele Ilesanmi Jegede; Terumi Hatanaka; Alongklod Tanomtong; Thomas Liehr; Marcelo de Bello Cioffi
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2018-06-19       Impact factor: 4.096

5.  Cytogenetics, genomics and biodiversity of the South American and African Arapaimidae fish family (Teleostei, Osteoglossiformes).

Authors:  Ezequiel Aguiar de Oliveira; Luiz Antonio Carlos Bertollo; Petr Rab; Tariq Ezaz; Cassia Fernanda Yano; Terumi Hatanaka; Oladele Ilesanmi Jegede; Alongklod Tanomtong; Thomas Liehr; Alexandr Sember; Sandra Regina Maruyama; Eliana Feldberg; Patrik Ferreira Viana; Marcelo de Bello Cioffi
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2019-03-25       Impact factor: 3.240

6.  Deciphering the Evolutionary History of Arowana Fishes (Teleostei, Osteoglossiformes, Osteoglossidae): Insight from Comparative Cytogenomics.

Authors:  Marcelo de Bello Cioffi; Petr Ráb; Tariq Ezaz; Luiz Antonio Carlos Bertollo; Sebastien Lavoué; Ezequiel Aguiar de Oliveira; Alexandr Sember; Wagner Franco Molina; Fernando Henrique Santos de Souza; Zuzana Majtánová; Thomas Liehr; Ahmed Basheer Hamid Al-Rikabi; Cassia Fernanda Yano; Patrik Viana; Eliana Feldberg; Peter Unmack; Terumi Hatanaka; Alongklod Tanomtong; Manolo Fernandez Perez
Journal:  Int J Mol Sci       Date:  2019-09-02       Impact factor: 5.923

7.  Artificial whole genome duplication in paleopolyploid sturgeons yields highest documented chromosome number in vertebrates.

Authors:  Ievgen Lebeda; Petr Ráb; Zuzana Majtánová; Martin Flajšhans
Journal:  Sci Rep       Date:  2020-11-12       Impact factor: 4.379

8.  GC and Repeats Profiling along Chromosomes-The Future of Fish Compositional Cytogenomics.

Authors:  Dominik Matoulek; Veronika Borůvková; Konrad Ocalewicz; Radka Symonová
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2020-12-31       Impact factor: 4.096

9.  Quantitative Approach to Fish Cytogenetics in the Context of Vertebrate Genome Evolution.

Authors:  Veronika Borůvková; W Mike Howell; Dominik Matoulek; Radka Symonová
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2021-02-22       Impact factor: 4.096

10.  A brief review of vertebrate sex evolution with a pledge for integrative research: towards 'sexomics'.

Authors:  Matthias Stöck; Lukáš Kratochvíl; Heiner Kuhl; Michail Rovatsos; Ben J Evans; Alexander Suh; Nicole Valenzuela; Frédéric Veyrunes; Qi Zhou; Tony Gamble; Blanche Capel; Manfred Schartl; Yann Guiguen
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2021-07-12       Impact factor: 6.237

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