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RESEARCH PRODUCT
Data from: Platyzoan paraphyly based on phylogenomic data supports a non-coelomate ancestry of Spiralia
Torsten Hugo StruckAlexandra Rebecca Wey-fabriziusAnja GolombekLars HeringAnne WeigertChristoph BleidornSabrina KlebowNataliia IakovenkoBernhard HausdorfMalte PetersenPatrick KückHolger HerlynThomas Hankelnsubject
long-branch attractionGnathiferaLophotrochozoaOrigin of BilateriaLife sciencesmedicine and health careGastrotrichaCambrian till recentSyndermataMedicinePlatyzoaPlatyhelminthesSpiraliaGnathostomulidadescription
Based on molecular data three major clades have been recognized within Bilateria: Deuterostomia, Ecdysozoa and Spiralia. Within Spiralia, small-sized and simply organized animals such as flatworms, gastrotrichs and gnathostomulids have recently been grouped together as Platyzoa. However, the representation of putative platyzoans was low in the respective molecular phylogenetic studies, in terms of both, taxon number and sequence data. Furthermore, increased substitution rates in platyzoan taxa raised the possibility that monophyletic Platyzoa represents an artefact due to long-branch attraction. In order to overcome such problems, we employed a phylogenomic approach, thereby substantially increasing i) the number of sampled species within Platyzoa and ii) species-specific sequence coverage in datasets of up to 82,162 amino acid positions. Using established and new measures (long-branch score) we disentangled phylogenetic signal from misleading effects such as long-branch attraction. In doing so, our phylogenomic analyses did not recover a monophyletic origin of platyzoan taxa that, instead, appeared paraphyletic with respect to the other spiralians. Platyhelminthes and Gastrotricha formed a monophylum, which we name Rouphozoa. To the exclusion of Gnathifera, Rouphozoa and all other spiralians represent a monophyletic group, which we name Platytrochozoa. Platyzoan paraphyly suggests that the last common ancestor of Spiralia was a simple-bodied organism lacking coelomic cavities, segmentation and complex brain structures, and that more complex animals such as annelids evolved from such a simply organized ancestor. This conclusion contradicts alternative evolutionary scenarios proposing an annelid-like ancestor of Bilateria and Spiralia and several independent events of secondary reduction.
year | journal | country | edition | language |
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2015-04-16 |