| Literature DB >> 34387305 |
Hideaki Yuasa1, Rei Kajitani1, Yuta Nakamura1, Kazuki Takahashi1, Miki Okuno1, Fumiya Kobayashi1, Takahiro Shinoda1, Atsushi Toyoda2, Yutaka Suzuki3, Nalinee Thongtham4, Zac Forsman5, Omri Bronstein6,7, Davide Seveso8,9, Enrico Montalbetti8,9, Coralie Taquet10, Gal Eyal11,12, Nina Yasuda13, Takehiko Itoh1.
Abstract
The crown-of-thorns starfish (COTS) is a coral predator that is widely distributed in Indo-Pacific Oceans. A previous phylogenetic study using partial mitochondrial sequences suggested that COTS had diverged into four distinct species, but a nuclear genome-based analysis to confirm this was not conducted. To address this, COTS species nuclear genome sequences were analysed here, sequencing Northern Indian Ocean (NIO) and Red Sea (RS) species genomes for the first time, followed by a comparative analysis with the Pacific Ocean (PO) species. Phylogenetic analysis and ADMIXTURE analysis revealed clear divergences between the three COTS species. Furthermore, within the PO species, the phylogenetic position of the Hawaiian sample was further away from the other Pacific-derived samples than expected based on the mitochondrial data, suggesting that it may be a PO subspecies. The pairwise sequentially Markovian coalescent model showed that the trajectories of the population size diverged by region during the Mid-Pleistocene transition when the sea-level was dramatically decreased, strongly suggesting that the three COTS species experienced allopatric speciation. Analysis of the orthologues indicated that there were remarkable genes with species-specific positive selection in the genomes of the PO and RS species, which suggested that there may be local adaptations in the COTS species.Entities:
Keywords: common ancestor; coral predator; phylogenetic analysis; population demographic history; three distinct sister species
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34387305 PMCID: PMC8386664 DOI: 10.1093/dnares/dsab012
Source DB: PubMed Journal: DNA Res ISSN: 1340-2838 Impact factor: 4.477