Pancrustacean Phylogeny in the Light of New Phylogenomic Data: Support for Remipedia as the Possible Sister Group of Hexapoda

Björn M. von Reumont(Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig), Ronald A. Jenner(Natural History Museum), Matthew A. Wills(University of Bath), Emiliano Dell’Ampio(University of Vienna), G. Pass(University of Vienna), Ingo Ebersberger(Medical University of Vienna), Benjamin Meyer(Universität Hamburg), S. Koenemann(University of Siegen), Thomas M. Iliffe(Texas A&M University at Galveston), Alexandros Stamatakis(Heidelberg Institute for Theoretical Studies), Oliver Niehuis(Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig), Karen Meusemann(Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig), Bernhard Misof(Zoological Research Museum Alexander Koenig)
Molecular Biology and Evolution
November 1, 2011
Cited by 292Open Access
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Abstract

Remipedes are a small and enigmatic group of crustaceans, first described only 30 years ago. Analyses of both morphological and molecular data have recently suggested a close relationship between Remipedia and Hexapoda. If true, the remipedes occupy an important position in pancrustacean evolution and may be pivotal for understanding the evolutionary history of crustaceans and hexapods. However, it is important to test this hypothesis using new data and new types of analytical approaches. Here, we assembled a phylogenomic data set of 131 taxa, incorporating newly generated 454 expressed sequence tag (EST) data from six species of crustaceans, representing five lineages (Remipedia, Laevicaudata, Spinicaudata, Ostracoda, and Malacostraca). This data set includes all crustacean species for which EST data are available (46 species), and our largest alignment encompasses 866,479 amino acid positions and 1,886 genes. A series of phylogenomic analyses was performed to evaluate pancrustacean relationships. We significantly improved the quality of our data for predicting putative orthologous genes and for generating data subsets by matrix reduction procedures, thereby improving the signal to noise ratio in the data. Eight different data sets were constructed, representing various combinations of orthologous genes, data subsets, and taxa. Our results demonstrate that the different ways to compile an initial data set of core orthologs and the selection of data subsets by matrix reduction can have marked effects on the reconstructed phylogenetic trees. Nonetheless, all eight data sets strongly support Pancrustacea with Remipedia as the sister group to Hexapoda. This is the first time that a sister group relationship of Remipedia and Hexapoda has been inferred using a comprehensive phylogenomic data set that is based on EST data. We also show that selecting data subsets with increased overall signal can help to identify and prevent artifacts in phylogenetic analyses.


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