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result(s) for
"Protostomia"
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Animal Phylogeny and Its Evolutionary Implications
by
Hejnol, Andreas
,
Dunn, Casey W.
,
Edgecombe, Gregory D.
in
Animal morphology
,
Animals
,
Bilateria
2014
In recent years, scientists have made remarkable progress reconstructing the animal phylogeny. There is broad agreement regarding many deep animal relationships, including the monophyly of animals, Bilateria, Protostomia, Ecdysozoa, and Spiralia. This stability now allows researchers to articulate the diminishing number of remaining questions in terms of well-defined alternative hypotheses. These remaining questions include relationships at the base of the animal tree, the position of Xenacoelomorpha, and the internal relationships of Spiralia. Recent progress in the field of animal phylogeny has important implications for our understanding of the evolution of development, morphology, genomes, and other characters. A remarkable pattern emerges-there is far more homoplasy for all these characters than had previously been anticipated, even among many complex characters such as segmentation and nervous systems. The fossil record dates most deep branches of the animal tree to an evolutionary radiation in the early Cambrian with roots in the Late Neoproterozoic.
Journal Article
Ancient Protostome Origin of Chemosensory Ionotropic Glutamate Receptors and the Evolution of Insect Taste and Olfaction
2010
Ionotropic glutamate receptors (iGluRs) are a highly conserved family of ligand-gated ion channels present in animals, plants, and bacteria, which are best characterized for their roles in synaptic communication in vertebrate nervous systems. A variant subfamily of iGluRs, the Ionotropic Receptors (IRs), was recently identified as a new class of olfactory receptors in the fruit fly, Drosophila melanogaster, hinting at a broader function of this ion channel family in detection of environmental, as well as intercellular, chemical signals. Here, we investigate the origin and evolution of IRs by comprehensive evolutionary genomics and in situ expression analysis. In marked contrast to the insect-specific Odorant Receptor family, we show that IRs are expressed in olfactory organs across Protostomia--a major branch of the animal kingdom that encompasses arthropods, nematodes, and molluscs--indicating that they represent an ancestral protostome chemosensory receptor family. Two subfamilies of IRs are distinguished: conserved \"antennal IRs,\" which likely define the first olfactory receptor family of insects, and species-specific \"divergent IRs,\" which are expressed in peripheral and internal gustatory neurons, implicating this family in taste and food assessment. Comparative analysis of drosophilid IRs reveals the selective forces that have shaped the repertoires in flies with distinct chemosensory preferences. Examination of IR gene structure and genomic distribution suggests both non-allelic homologous recombination and retroposition contributed to the expansion of this multigene family. Together, these findings lay a foundation for functional analysis of these receptors in both neurobiological and evolutionary studies. Furthermore, this work identifies novel targets for manipulating chemosensory-driven behaviours of agricultural pests and disease vectors.
Journal Article
Broad phylogenomic sampling improves resolution of the animal tree of life
2008
Improved relations
The accumulation of molecular data is reshaping our understanding of the evolutionary relationships between the major groups of animals. Early work in the field relied upon data from a small number of genes, but the availability of fully sequenced genomes and expressed sequence tags (ESTs, short sub-sequences obtained from large numbers of complementary DNA clones), means that huge swathes of the animal kingdom can now be subjected to such analysis. A new study describes and discusses almost 40 megabases-worth of ESTs from animals of 21 phyla, including 11 animals for which no genomic or EST data were previously available. The conclusions confirm ideas long established by anatomy, including the monophyletic nature of the molluscs, deriving from a common ancestor despite their remarkable variety. New and interesting evolutionary relationships are also uncovered, including a single origin for spiral cleavage of the early embryo. The cover illustrates animal diversity, including acorn, ribbon, arrow and velvet worms, jellyfish and sea spider.
This paper describes and discusses almost 40 megabases of expressed sequence tags (EST) clones from the DNA of animals from 21 phyla, including 11 animals for which genomic or EST data were previously lacking. The conclusions confirm ideas long established by anatomy, but raise new and interesting evolutionary relationships.
Long-held ideas regarding the evolutionary relationships among animals have recently been upended by sometimes controversial hypotheses based largely on insights from molecular data
1
,
2
. These new hypotheses include a clade of moulting animals (Ecdysozoa)
3
and the close relationship of the lophophorates to molluscs and annelids (Lophotrochozoa)
4
. Many relationships remain disputed, including those that are required to polarize key features of character evolution, and support for deep nodes is often low. Phylogenomic approaches, which use data from many genes, have shown promise for resolving deep animal relationships, but are hindered by a lack of data from many important groups. Here we report a total of 39.9 Mb of expressed sequence tags from 29 animals belonging to 21 phyla, including 11 phyla previously lacking genomic or expressed-sequence-tag data. Analysed in combination with existing sequences, our data reinforce several previously identified clades that split deeply in the animal tree (including Protostomia, Ecdysozoa and Lophotrochozoa), unambiguously resolve multiple long-standing issues for which there was strong conflicting support in earlier studies with less data (such as velvet worms rather than tardigrades as the sister group of arthropods
5
), and provide molecular support for the monophyly of molluscs, a group long recognized by morphologists. In addition, we find strong support for several new hypotheses. These include a clade that unites annelids (including sipunculans and echiurans) with nemerteans, phoronids and brachiopods, molluscs as sister to that assemblage, and the placement of ctenophores as the earliest diverging extant multicellular animals. A single origin of spiral cleavage (with subsequent losses) is inferred from well-supported nodes. Many relationships between a stable subset of taxa find strong support, and a diminishing number of lineages remain recalcitrant to placement on the tree.
Journal Article
Pandiculation documented in a spider
2021
After a long period of waiting in ambush on the hub of its orb web, an araneid spider (Cycloso argenteoalba) was found to stretch out its body and legs, exhibiting a distinctive behavior known as pandiculation. Pandiculation is a natural and instinctive activity, often accompanying yawning, that is performed broadly by mammals (including humans) and birds, while only yawning is known in reptiles, amphibians, and fish, excluding sharks and rays. However, along with other arthropods, spiders belong to the Protostomia, which is phylogenetically very distant from the Deuterostomia, whose members include vertebrates. Whether pandiculation has evolved once or separately in Mammalia/Aves and Araneae is still uncertain, but the discovery of pandiculation in spiders suggests that this behavior may be exhibited by other arachnids and perhaps by other arthropods or even other Protostomia as well. Within the Arthropoda, the possibility of yawning via spiracles (exoskeletal openings associated with respiration) should also be considered.
Journal Article
Comparative Analysis of Bivalve and Sea Urchin Genetics and Development: Investigating the Dichotomy in Bilateria
2023
This comprehensive review presents a comparative analysis of early embryogenesis in Protostomia and Deuterostomia, the first of which exhibit a mosaic pattern of development, where cells are fated deterministically, while Deuterostomia display a regulatory pattern of development, where the fate of cells is indeterminate. Despite these fundamental differences, there are common transcriptional mechanisms that underline their evolutionary linkages, particularly in the field of functional genomics. By elucidating both conserved and unique regulatory strategies, this review provides essential insights into the comparative embryology and developmental dynamics of these groups. The objective of this review is to clarify the shared and distinctive characteristics of transcriptional regulatory mechanisms. This will contribute to the extensive areas of functional genomics, evolutionary biology and developmental biology, and possibly lay the foundation for future research and discussion on this seminal topic.
Journal Article
Genome composition and GC content influence loci distribution in reduced representation genomic studies
by
Pascual, Marta
,
Pegueroles, Cinta
,
Turon, Xavier
in
Adapters
,
Analysis
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
2024
Background
Genomic architecture is a key evolutionary trait for living organisms. Due to multiple complex adaptive and neutral forces which impose evolutionary pressures on genomes, there is a huge variability of genomic features. However, their variability and the extent to which genomic content determines the distribution of recovered loci in reduced representation sequencing studies is largely unexplored.
Results
Here, by using 80 genome assemblies, we observed that whereas plants primarily increase their genome size by expanding their intergenic regions, animals expand both intergenic and intronic regions, although the expansion patterns differ between deuterostomes and protostomes. Loci mapping in introns, exons, and intergenic categories obtained by in silico digestion using 2b-enzymes are positively correlated with the percentage of these regions in the corresponding genomes, suggesting that loci distribution mostly mirrors genomic architecture of the selected taxon. However, exonic regions showed a significant enrichment of loci in all groups regardless of the used enzyme. Moreover, when using selective adaptors to obtain a secondarily reduced loci dataset, the percentage and distribution of retained loci also varied. Adaptors with G/C terminals recovered a lower percentage of selected loci, with a further enrichment of exonic regions, while adaptors with A/T terminals retained a higher percentage of loci and slightly selected more intronic regions than expected.
Conclusions
Our results highlight how genome composition, genome GC content, RAD enzyme choice and use of base-selective adaptors influence reduced genome representation techniques. This is important to acknowledge in population and conservation genomic studies, as it determines the abundance and distribution of loci.
Journal Article
The evolution of the metazoan Toll receptor family and its expression during protostome development
by
Hejnol, Andreas
,
Lu, Tsai-Ming
,
Alcalde, Andrea Orus
in
Analysis
,
Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
,
Animals
2021
Background: Toll-like receptors (TLRs) play a crucial role in immunity and development. They contain leucine-rich repeat domains, one transmembrane domain, and one Toll/IL-1 receptor domain. TLRs have been classified into V-type/scc and P-type/mcc TLRs, based on differences in the leucine-rich repeat domain region. Although TLRs are widespread in animals, detailed phylogenetic studies of this gene family are lacking. Here we aim to uncover TLR evolution by conducting a survey and a phylogenetic analysis in species across Bilateria. To discriminate between their role in development and immunity we furthermore analyzed stage-specific transcriptomes of the ecdysozoans Priapulus caudatus and Hypsibius exemplaris, and the spiralians Crassostrea gigas and Terebratalia transversa. Results: We detected a low number of TLRs in ecdysozoan species, and multiple independent radiations within the Spiralia. V-type/scc and P-type/mcc type-receptors are present in cnidarians, protostomes and deuterostomes, and therefore they emerged early in TLR evolution, followed by a loss in xenacoelomorphs. Our phylogenetic analysis shows that TLRs cluster into three major clades: clade α is present in cnidarians, ecdysozoans, and spiralians; clade β in deuterostomes, ecdysozoans, and spiralians; and clade γ is only found in spiralians. Our stage-specific transcriptome and in situ hybridization analyses show that TLRs are expressed during development in all species analyzed, which indicates a broad role of TLRs during animal development. Conclusions: Our findings suggest that a clade α TLR gene (TLR-Ca) and a clade β/γ TLR gene (TLR-Cβ/γ) were already present in the cnidarian-bilaterian common ancestor. However, although TLR-Ca was conserved in cnidarians, TLR-Cβ/γ was lost during the early evolution of these taxa. Moreover, TLR-Cβ/γ duplicated to generate TLR-Cβ and TLR-Cγ in the lineage to the last common protostome-deuterostome ancestor. TLR-Ca, TLR-Cβ and TLR-Cγ further expanded generating the three major TLR clades. While all three clades radiated in several spiralian lineages, specific TLRs clades have been presumably lost in other lineages. Furthermore, the expression of the majority of these genes during protostome ontogeny suggests a likely role in development.
Journal Article
The evolution of the Ecdysozoa
2008
Ecdysozoa is a clade composed of eight phyla: the arthropods, tardigrades and onychophorans that share segmentation and appendages and the nematodes, nematomorphs, priapulids, kinorhynchs and loriciferans, which are worms with an anterior proboscis or introvert. Ecdysozoa contains the vast majority of animal species and there is a great diversity of body plans among both living and fossil members. The monophyly of the clade has been called into question by some workers based on analyses of whole genome datasets. We review the evidence that now conclusively supports the unique origin of these phyla. Relationships within Ecdysozoa are also controversial and we discuss the molecular and morphological evidence for a number of monophyletic groups within this superphylum.
Journal Article
Conservation, loss, and redeployment of Wnt ligands in protostomes: implications for understanding the evolution of segment formation
by
Balavoine, Guillaume
,
Vervoort, Michel
,
Colbourne, John K
in
Amino acids
,
Animal Systematics/Taxonomy/Biogeography
,
Animals
2010
Background
The
Wnt
genes encode secreted glycoprotein ligands that regulate a wide range of developmental processes, including axis elongation and segmentation. There are thirteen subfamilies of
Wnt
genes in metazoans and this gene diversity appeared early in animal evolution. The loss of
Wnt
subfamilies appears to be common in insects, but little is known about the
Wnt
repertoire in other arthropods, and moreover the expression and function of these genes have only been investigated in a few protostomes outside the relatively
Wnt
-poor model species
Drosophila melanogaster
and
Caenorhabditis elegans
. To investigate the evolution of this important gene family more broadly in protostomes, we surveyed the
Wnt
gene diversity in the crustacean
Daphnia pulex
, the chelicerates
Ixodes scapularis
and
Achaearanea tepidariorum
, the myriapod
Glomeris marginata
and the annelid
Platynereis dumerilii
. We also characterised
Wnt
gene expression in the latter three species, and further investigated expression of these genes in the beetle
Tribolium castaneum
.
Results
We found that
Daphnia
and
Platynereis
both contain twelve
Wnt
subfamilies demonstrating that the common ancestors of arthropods, ecdysozoans and protostomes possessed all members of all
Wnt
subfamilies except
Wnt3
. Furthermore, although there is striking loss of
Wnt
genes in insects, other arthropods have maintained greater
Wnt
gene diversity. The expression of many
Wnt
genes overlap in segmentally reiterated patterns and in the segment addition zone, and while these patterns can be relatively conserved among arthropods and the annelid, there have also been changes in the expression of some
Wnt
genes in the course of protostome evolution. Nevertheless, our results strongly support the parasegment as the primary segmental unit in arthropods, and suggest further similarities between segmental and parasegmental regulation by
Wnt
genes in annelids and arthropods respectively.
Conclusions
Despite frequent losses of
Wnt
gene subfamilies in lineages such as insects, nematodes and leeches, most protostomes have probably maintained much of their ancestral repertoire of twelve
Wnt
genes. The maintenance of a large set of these ligands could be in part due to their combinatorial activity in various tissues rather than functional redundancy. The activity of such
Wnt
'landscapes' as opposed to the function of individual ligands could explain the patterns of conservation and redeployment of these genes in important developmental processes across metazoans. This requires further analysis of the expression and function of these genes in a wider range of taxa.
Journal Article