| Literature DB >> 28505209 |
Young Kyun Kim1,2, Seung Hyeon Kim1, Joo Mi Yi3, Chang-Keun Kang2, Frederick Short4, Kun-Seop Lee1.
Abstract
Although seagrass species in the genus Halophila are generally distributed in tropical or subtropical regions, H. nipponica has been reported to occur in temperate coastal waters of the northwestern Pacific. Because H. nipponica occurs only in the warm temperate areas influenced by the Kuroshio Current and shows a tropical seasonal growth pattern, such as severely restricted growth in low water temperatures, it was hypothesized that this temperate Halophila species diverged from tropical species in the relatively recent evolutionary past. We used a phylogenetic analysis of internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions to examine the genetic variability and evolutionary trend of H. nipponica. ITS sequences of H. nipponica from various locations in Korea and Japan were identical or showed very low sequence divergence (less than 3-base pair, bp, difference), confirming that H. nipponica from Japan and Korea are the same species. Halophila species in the section Halophila, which have simple phyllotaxy (a pair of petiolate leaves at the rhizome node), were separated into five well-supported clades by maximum parsimony analysis. H. nipponica grouped with H. okinawensis and H. gaudichaudii from the subtropical regions in the same clade, the latter two species having quite low ITS sequence divergence from H. nipponica (7-15-bp). H. nipponica in Clade I diverged 2.95 ± 1.08 million years ago from species in Clade II, which includes H. ovalis. According to geographical distribution and genetic similarity, H. nipponica appears to have diverged from a tropical species like H. ovalis and adapted to warm temperate environments. The results of divergence time estimates suggest that the temperate H. nipponica is an older species than the subtropical H. okinawensis and H. gaudichaudii and they may have different evolutionary histories.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28505209 PMCID: PMC5432184 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0177772
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Fig 1Halophila nipponica populations in the temperate waters of Korea and Japan.
Geographical locations for H. nipponica populations in Japanese waters were obtained from Uchimura et al. [15].
Collection information and GenBank accession numbers of Halophila nipponica specimens used for phylogenetic analysis from various geographical locations in the temperate coastal waters of northeast Asia.
| Species | Collection information | Depth (m) | N | Sample label | Herbarium no. | GenBank accession no. |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| An-do Island (34°28′48″N, 128°48′35″E), Korea | 6 | 20 | HN01–HN20 | KX668184 | ||
| Sorok-do Island (34°31′01″N, 127°08′13″E), Korea | 4 | 8 | HN21–HN28 | KX668185 | ||
| Namhae Island (34°43′39″N, 128°02′11″E), Korea | 4–8 | 12 | HN31–HN42 | KX668186 | ||
| Koje Island (34°57′47″N, 128°37′19″E), Korea | 3 | 10 | HN51–55, HN58–60 | KX668187 | ||
| HN56, 57 | KX668188 | |||||
| Geomun-do Island (34°03′21″N, 127°16′58″E), Korea | 8 | 4 | HN61, 63, 64 | KX668189 | ||
| HN62 | KX668190 | |||||
| Odawa Bay (35°13′16″N, 139°37′17″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753656 | AB436931 | |
| Mutsu Bay (41°00′36″N, 140°40′01″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753676 | AB436932 | |
| Suou-Oohshima, Yamaguchi Pref., Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753649 | AB436933 | |
| Mugi-Ooshima (33°38′10″N, 134°29′13″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753651 | AB436934 | |
| Ezura,Wakayama Pref., Japan | - | - | - | CBM 238518 | AB436934 | |
| Urumi (36°01′49″N, 133°01′29″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753668 | AB436935 | |
| Oohama (34°13′33″N, 133°36′35″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753671 | AB436935 | |
| Mihokogaura (32°25′19″N, 131°40′30″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753672 | AB436935 | |
| Sasebo (33°10′50″N, 129°38′47″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753674 | AB436935 | |
| Hasama (34°58′31″N, 139°46′59″E), Japan | - | - | - | TNS 753675 | AB436935 |
ITS sequences of H. nipponica from Korean waters have been registered to GenBank in the present study. Data on H. nipponica from Japanese waters were obtained from the NCBI/GenBank database [15]. The herbarium specimens of Korean H. nipponica have been deposited in the Herbarium of Kyungpook National University.
Fig 2Phylogenetic tree of Halophila species inferred from maximum parsimony analysis using 655 base pairs of nrDNA including ITS1, 5.8S rDNA, and ITS2.
Bootstrap support values above 50% are shown on branches.
Similarities (%) and number of ITS sequence differences among five clades in section Halophila.
| - | 23.4 | 33.5 | 45.7 | 43.0 | |
| 95.9 | - | 25.6 | 36.3 | 37.0 | |
| 94.0 | 95.5 | - | 40.8 | 44.8 | |
| 91.7 | 93.4 | 92.6 | - | 35.8 | |
| 92.2 | 93.3 | 91.8 | 93.5 | - |
Values above the dashed diagonal represent the number of ITS sequence differences, while those below the diagonal represent similarities among the five clades of section Halophila.
Fig 3Similarity of ITS sequences between Halophila nipponica and other Halophila species distributed in the Indo-Pacific and western Pacific regions.
Fig 4Relative divergence time estimates of five clades in the section Halophila (A), and the Halophila species (H. nipponica, H. okinawensis, and H. gaudichaudii) in Clade I and H. ovalis in Clade II (B).
Relative divergence time was estimated by ITS sequence diversity using the NETWORK 4.6 program. Values are mean ± SD.