Mitochondrial genes collectively suggest the paraphyly of Crustacea with respect to Insecta.

J Mol Evol

Centro de Investigaciones Marinas, Universidad de La Habana, Calle 1ra No. 2808, esquina 30, Miramar, C. Habana, Cuba.

Published: July 1999

Complete sequences of seven protein coding genes from Penaeus notialis mitochondrial DNA were compared in base composition and codon usage with homologous genes from Artemia franciscana and four insects. The crustacean genes are significantly less A + T-rich than their counterpart in insects and the pattern of codon usage (ratio of G + C-rich versus A + T-rich codon) is less biased. A phylogenetic analysis using amino acid sequences of the seven corresponding polypeptides supports a sister-taxon status for mollusks-annelid and arthropods. Furthermore, a distance matrix-based tree and two most-parsimonious trees both suggest that crustaceans are paraphyletic with respect to insects. This is also supported by the inclusion of Panulirus argus COII (complete) and COI and COIII (partial) sequence data. From analysis of single and combined genes to infer phylogenies, it is observed that obtained from single genes are not well supported in most topologies cases and notably differ from that of the tree based on all seven genes.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/pl00006527DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

codon usage
8
genes
6
mitochondrial genes
4
genes collectively
4
collectively paraphyly
4
paraphyly crustacea
4
crustacea respect
4
respect insecta
4
insecta complete
4
complete sequences
4

Similar Publications

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!