Hemichordates are instrumental to understanding early deuterostome and chordate evolution, yet diversity and relationships within the group have been understudied. Recently, there has been renewed interest in hemichordate diversity and taxonomy, although current findings suggest that much hemichordate diversity remains to be discovered. Herein, we present a molecular phylogenetic study based on nuclear 18S rDNA sequence data, which includes 35 previously unsampled taxa and represents all recognized hemichordate families. We include mitochondrial 16S rDNA data from 66 enteropneust taxa and three pterobranch Rhabdopleura species, and recover colonial pterobranchs and solitary enteropneusts as reciprocally monophyletic taxa. Our phylogenetic results also reveal a previously unknown clade of at least four species of harrimaniid enteropneusts from cold waters, including Antarctica, the North Atlantic around Iceland and Norway, and the deep sea off Oregon. These small worms (1-5 mm in length), occur from 130 to 2950 m and are not closely related to other deep-sea harrimaniids, indicating that diversity of enteropneusts within the deep sea is broader than previously described in the literature. Discovery of this clade, as well as larger torquaratorids from Antarctica, strengthens hypotheses of close associations between Antarctic and deep-sea fauna.
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BMC Ecol Evol
September 2024
Department of Cell Biology and Human Anatomy, University of California, Davis, CA, 95616, USA.
Background: The evolution of extracellular matrix is tightly linked to the evolution of organogenesis in metazoans. Tenascins are extracellular matrix glycoproteins of chordates that participate in integrin-signaling and morphogenetic events. Single tenascins are encoded by invertebrate chordates, and multiple tenascin paralogs are found in vertebrates (designated tenascin-C, tenascin-R, tenascin-W and tenascin-X) yet, overall, the evolution of this family has remained unclear.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFZookeys
May 2024
Center for Evolution and Conservation Biology, Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory (Guangzhou), Guangzhou, 511458, China Center for Evolution and Conservation Biology, Southern Marine Science and Engineering Guangdong Laboratory Guangzhou China.
A morphological and molecular analyses of a newly discovered species, , from Danzhou city, Hainan Island, China is presented. Several morphological characters distinguish this new species, while molecular analyses confirm significant genetic divergence from its recognized congeners (p-distance > 0.25 in mitochondrial genomes).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPLoS Biol
June 2024
Institute of Cellular and Organismic Biology, Academia Sinica, Taipei, Taiwan.
Deuterostomes are a monophyletic group of animals that includes Hemichordata, Echinodermata (together called Ambulacraria), and Chordata. The diversity of deuterostome body plans has made it challenging to reconstruct their ancestral condition and to decipher the genetic changes that drove the diversification of deuterostome lineages. Here, we generate chromosome-level genome assemblies of 2 hemichordate species, Ptychodera flava and Schizocardium californicum, and use comparative genomic approaches to infer the chromosomal architecture of the deuterostome common ancestor and delineate lineage-specific chromosomal modifications.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSci Rep
April 2024
Marine Biological Section, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, Universitetsparken 4, DK-2100, Copenhagen, Denmark.
Hemichordata has always played a central role in evolutionary studies of Chordata due to their close phylogenetic affinity and shared morphological characteristics. Hemichordates had no meiofaunal representatives until the surprising discovery of a microscopic, paedomorphic enteropneust Meioglossus psammophilus (Harrimaniidae, Hemichordata) from the Caribbean in 2012. No additional species have been described since, questioning the broader distribution and significance of this genus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
December 2023
Marine Biology Research Division, Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UC San Diego, 9500 Gilman Drive #0202, La Jolla, CA 92093, USA. Electronic address:
Pterobranchs, a major group of the phylum Hemichordata, first appear in the fossil record during the Cambrian, and there are more than 600 fossil genera dominated by the mainly planktic graptolites of the Paleozoic, which are widely used as zone fossils for correlating sedimentary rock sequences. Pterobranchs are rare today; they are sessile marine forms represented by Rhabdopleura, which is considered the only living graptolite, and Cephalodiscus. Unlike their sister taxon, the colonial graptolites, cephalodiscids are pseudocolonial.
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