ORDER within the chaos: Insights into phylogenetic relationships within the Anomura (Crustacea: Decapoda) from mitochondrial sequences and gene order rearrangements

[Display omitted] •This study more than doubles complete mitogenome resources for the decapod infraorder Anomura.•New feature in MitoPhAST version 2.0 extracts and clusters mitochondrial gene orders (MGO) information.•Anomura is a MGO “hot spot”, with major events associated with lineages in extreme...

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Veröffentlicht in:Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 2018-10, Vol.127, p.320-331
Hauptverfasser: Tan, Mun Hua, Gan, Han Ming, Lee, Yin Peng, Linton, Stuart, Grandjean, Frederic, Bartholomei-Santos, Marlise Ladvocat, Miller, Adam D., Austin, Christopher M.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:[Display omitted] •This study more than doubles complete mitogenome resources for the decapod infraorder Anomura.•New feature in MitoPhAST version 2.0 extracts and clusters mitochondrial gene orders (MGO) information.•Anomura is a MGO “hot spot”, with major events associated with lineages in extreme niches.•Highly variable MGO patterns are found in brachyuran freshwater crabs.•A putative ancestral anomuran MGO is predicted based on current available data. The infraorder Anomura consists of a morphologically and ecologically heterogeneous group of decapod crustaceans, and has attracted interest from taxonomists for decades attempting to find some order out of the seemingly chaotic diversity within the group. Species-level diversity within the Anomura runs the gamut from the “hairy” spindly-legged yeti crab found in deep-sea hydrothermal vent environments to the largest known terrestrial invertebrate, the robust coconut or robber crab. Owing to a well-developed capacity for parallel evolution, as evidenced by the occurrence of multiple independent carcinization events, Anomura has long tested the patience and skill of both taxonomists attempting to find order, and phylogeneticists trying to establish stable hypotheses of evolutionary inter-relationships. In this study, we performed genome skimming to recover the mitogenome sequences of 12 anomuran species including the world’s largest extant invertebrate, the robber crab (Birgus latro), thereby over doubling these resources for this group, together with 8 new brachyuran mitogenomes. Maximum-likelihood (ML) and Bayesian-inferred (BI) phylogenetic reconstructions based on amino acid sequences from mitogenome protein-coding genes provided strong support for the monophyly of the Anomura and Brachyura and their sister relationship, consistent with previous studies. The majority of relationships within families were supported and were largely consistent with current taxonomic classifications, whereas many relationships at higher taxonomic levels were unresolved. Nevertheless, we have strong support for a polyphyletic Paguroidea and recovered a well-supported clade of a subset of paguroids (Diogenidae + Coenobitidae) basal to all other anomurans, though this requires further testing with greater taxonomic sampling. We also introduce a new feature to the MitoPhAST bioinformatics pipeline (https://github.com/mht85/MitoPhAST) that enables the extraction of mitochondrial gene order (MGO) information directly from GenBa
ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2018.05.015