Mitogenomics reveals low variation within a trigeneric complex of black corals from the North Pacific Ocean
A 2013 study revealed that three morphologically distinct antipatharian genera ( Dendrobathypathes , Lillipathes , Parantipathes ) from the eastern North Pacific (ENP) are genetically indistinguishable using three mitochondrial and four nuclear markers (7,203 bp). To investigate whether this lack of...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Organisms diversity & evolution 2022-06, Vol.22 (2), p.343-353 |
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Zusammenfassung: | A 2013 study revealed that three morphologically distinct antipatharian genera (
Dendrobathypathes
,
Lillipathes
,
Parantipathes
) from the eastern North Pacific (ENP) are genetically indistinguishable using three mitochondrial and four nuclear markers (7,203 bp). To investigate whether this lack of molecular variability extends beyond three mitochondrial genes, we sequenced the complete mitogenome of a single representative within each genus.
Dendrobathypathes
was the only specimen from the 2013 study containing high molecular weight (HMW) DNA. In terms of geographic proximity to the ENP, the closest
Lillipathes
and
Parantipathes
yielding HMW DNA were from the central North Pacific near Hawai'i. Based on
cox3
-IGR-
cox1
,
Lillipathes
and
Parantipathes
each contained two variable sites and thus were not equivalent substitutes for specimens from the ENP. Nonetheless, variation was extremely low when comparing the mitogenomes, with 32 variable positions across 17,687 bp. Pairwise comparisons revealed 18 (
Dendrobathypathes
and
Parantipathes
) and 23 (
Lillipathes
and
Parantipathes;
Lillipathes
and
Dendrobathypathes
) variable sites. An ML-based phylogenetic reconstruction using 13 protein-coding genes and two rRNAs revealed that the three North Pacific genera grouped in a clade with Atlantic
Dendrobathypathes
, while Atlantic
Parantipathes
spp. formed a sister clade. Previous research hypothesized that hybridization with subsequent introgression was responsible for the lack of variability among genera. Due to uniparental inheritance and lack of recombination, mtDNA cannot identify hybrids; however, finding Pacific
Parantipathes
grouping with
Dendrobathypathes
and
Lillipathes
rather than Atlantic
Parantipathes
suggests that the trigeneric complex has a unique evolutionary history. If high-resolution nuclear markers support hybridization, it will be important to elucidate the molecular mechanism that maintains three distinct morphological forms occurring in sympatry. |
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ISSN: | 1439-6092 1618-1077 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13127-021-00537-5 |