| Literature DB >> 31881939 |
Russell J S Orr1, Marianne N Haugen2, Björn Berning3, Philip Bock4, Robyn L Cumming5, Wayne K Florence6, Masato Hirose7, Emanuela Di Martino8, Mali H Ramsfjell8, Maja M Sannum8, Abigail M Smith9, Leandro M Vieira10, Andrea Waeschenbach11, Lee Hsiang Liow12,13.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Understanding the phylogenetic relationships among species is one of the main goals of systematic biology. Simultaneously, credible phylogenetic hypotheses are often the first requirement for unveiling the evolutionary history of traits and for modelling macroevolutionary processes. However, many non-model taxa have not yet been sequenced to an extent such that statistically well-supported molecular phylogenies can be constructed for these purposes. Here, we use a genome-skimming approach to extract sequence information for 15 mitochondrial and 2 ribosomal operon genes from the cheilostome bryozoan family, Adeonidae, Busk, 1884, whose current systematics is based purely on morphological traits. The members of the Adeonidae are, like all cheilostome bryozoans, benthic, colonial, marine organisms. Adeonids are also geographically widely-distributed, often locally common, and are sometimes important habitat-builders.Entities:
Keywords: Cheilostome bryozoans; Genome skimming; Mitogenome; Phylogeny; rRNA
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31881939 PMCID: PMC6935126 DOI: 10.1186/s12862-019-1563-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Taxa used in this study
| Taxon | BLEED nr. | Location | Accession nr. | Circularised mitogenome (bp) | Genes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 298 | W. Aus | MK894382, MK894346, MN131169 | 14,577 | 17 | |
| 297 | W. Aus | MK894378, MK894344, MN131148 | 14,574 | 16 | |
| 746 | W. Aus | MK894379, MN131151 | 14,578 | 15 | |
| 749 | W. Aus | MK894381, MK894345, MN131147 | 14,578 | 16 | |
| 293 | W. Aus | MK894376, MK894342, MN131159 | 14,671 | 17 | |
| 295 | W. Aus | MK894377, MK894343, MN131153 | 14,701 | 17 | |
| 292 | W. Aus | MK894380, MK894375, MN131150 | 14,693 | 17 | |
| 294 | W. Aus | MK894383, MK894374, MN131155 | 14,663 | 17 | |
| 438 | W. Aus | MK894384, MK894347, MN131171 | 16,229 | 17 | |
| 444 | W. Aus | MK894385, MK894348, MN131154 | 17 | ||
| 49 | JP | MK894386, MK894372, MN131175 | 17 | ||
| 303 | W. Aus | MK894404, MK894364, MN131166 | 16 | ||
| 301 | W. Aus | MK894405, MK894365, MN131149 | 17 | ||
| 300 | W. Aus | MK894402, MK894362, MN131167 | 17 | ||
| 306 | W. Aus | MK894403, MK894363, MN131172 | 13 | ||
| 344 | NZ | MK894406, MK894366, MN131174 | 17 | ||
| 48 | NZ | MK894407, MK894367, MN131152 | 15,198 | 17 | |
| 750 | W. Aus | MK894390, MK894370, MN131163 | 14 | ||
| 305 | W. Aus | MK894399, MK894355, MN131170 | 17 | ||
| 439 | W. Aus | MK894396, MK894352, MN131162 | 17 | ||
| 429 | W. Aus | MK894398, MK894353, MN131146 | 17 | ||
| 416 | W. Aus | MK894397, MK894354, MN131144 | 17 | ||
| 417 | W. Aus | MK894395, MK894351, MN131176 | 16 | ||
| 393 | SA | MK894391, MK894349, MN131157 | 19,241 | 17 | |
| 410 | SA | MK894392, MK894350, MN131161 | 19,436 | 16 | |
| 391 | SA | MK894393, MK894357, MN131177–81 | 13 | ||
| 408 | SA | MK894394, MK894358, MN131182–87 | 15 | ||
| 373 | CV | MK894400, MK894356, MN131158 | 17 | ||
| 401 | BR | MK894388, MK894369, MN131173 | 15 | ||
| 396 | BR | MK894389, MK894373, MN131164 | 16,957 | 16 | |
| 41 | CR | MK894387, MK894371, MN131160 | 14,696 | 17 | |
| 302 | W. Aus | MK894401, MK894368, MN131156 | 18,244 | 16 | |
| 38 | ALG | MK894408, MK894359, MN131168 | 16,859 | 17 | |
| 39 | CY | MK894409, MK894360, MN131145 | 17 | ||
| 40 | CR | MK894410, MK894361, MN131165 | 16 | ||
| NC_010197 | 15 | ||||
| JN680948, NC_018344 | 15 | ||||
| FJ196110, NC_016722 | 16 | ||||
| FJ409601, FJ409577, NC_008192 | 15 | ||||
| NC_018355 | 14 | ||||
| FJ409600, FJ409576, NC_038192 | 16 | ||||
| EU650325, DQ333340, NC_015646 | 15 | ||||
| JN680947, JN681042, NC_011820 | 16 |
In-group taxa generated for this study are shown in white, whilst outgroup taxa are shown in grey. BLEED stands for Bryozoan Lab for Ecology, Evolution and Development and BLEED numbers are numerical tags for the specimens. Accession nr. refer to those at NCBI. Abbreviations for countries (descending order): W. Aus Western Australia, JP Japan, NZ New Zealand, SA South Africa, CV Cape Verde, BR Brazil, CR Croatia, ALG Algeria, and CY Cyprus. The size, in base pairs (bp), of the mitogenome are only shown if it is closed/circularised. Genes, represents the number of genes, of maximum 17, recovered and used in the alignments for each taxon. For an expanded overview of metadata see Additional file 2: Table S1
Fig. 1The phylogeny of adeonids based on 17 genes. Maximum likelihood topology of 35 adeonid ingroup taxa with 10,531 nucleotide and amino acid characters inferred using RAxML. The numbers on the internal nodes are ML bootstrap values (BP from RAxML) followed by posterior probabilities (PP from MrBayes). Black circles indicate 100BP and 1.00PP. The placement and statistical support for the outgroup is taken from Additional file 1: Figure S3 and represented with a stippled line. Adeonellidae also represents the lepralioid frontal shield form as does Adeonidae the umbonuloid form (note the frontal shield form has been inferred from samples other than those represented in the study and that the Cucullipora frontal shield form is unknown). Abbreviations for countries: W. Aus = Western Australia, JP = Japan, NZ = New Zealand, SA = South Africa, CV = Cape Verde, BR = Brazil, CR = Croatia, ALG = Algeria, and CY = Cyprus. The scale bare represents substitutions per site