Base-substitution rates of nuclear and mitochondrial genes for polyclad flatworms
The increase in the use of molecular methodologies in systematics has driven the necessity for a comprehensive understanding of the limitations of different genetic markers. Not every marker is optimal for all species, which has led to multiple approaches in the study of the taxonomy and phylogeny o...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Zoosystematics and Evolution 2024-07, Vol.100 (3), p.863-876 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The increase in the use of molecular methodologies in systematics has driven the necessity for a comprehensive understanding of the limitations of different genetic markers. Not every marker is optimal for all species, which has led to multiple approaches in the study of the taxonomy and phylogeny of polyclad flatworms. The present study evaluates base-substitution rates of nuclear ribosomal (
18S rDNA
and
28S rDNA
), mitochondrial ribosomal (
16S rDNA
), and protein-codifying (
cytb
,
cox1
) markers for this taxonomic group, with the main objective of assessing the robustness of these different markers for phylogenetic studies. Mutation rates and Ti/Tv ratios of the other markers were assessed for the first time. We estimated substitution rates and found
cytb
to be the most variable, while
18S rDNA
was the least variable among them. On the other hand, the transition to transversion (Ti/Tv) ratio of the different genes revealed differences between the markers, with a higher number of transitions in the nuclear gene
28S
and a higher number of transversions in the mitochondrial genes. Lastly, we identified that the third codon position of the studied protein-codifying genes was highly variable and that this position was saturated in the
cox1
marker but not in
cytb
. We conclude that it is important to assess the markers employed for different phylogenetic levels for future studies, particularly in the order Polycladida. We encourage the use of mitochondrial genes
cytb
and
16S
for phylogenetic studies at suborder, superfamily, and family levels and species delimitation in polyclads, in addition to the well-known
28S
and
cox1
. |
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ISSN: | 1435-1935 1860-0743 1860-0743 |
DOI: | 10.3897/zse.100.119945 |