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Evolutionary relationship and species separation of four morphologically similar stichotrichous ciliates (Protozoa, Ciliophora)
Author(s) -
Zhenzhen Yi,
John C. Clamp,
Khaled A. S. AlRasheid,
Abdulaziz A. AlKhedhairy,
Zigui Chen,
Weibo Song
Publication year - 2009
Publication title -
progress in natural science materials international
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.864
H-Index - 63
eISSN - 1745-5391
pISSN - 1002-0071
DOI - 10.1016/j.pnsc.2008.05.033
Subject(s) - biology , phylogenetic tree , restriction fragment length polymorphism , phylogenetics , ciliate , restriction enzyme , spacer dna , evolutionary biology , ribosomal dna , clade , molecular phylogenetics , protozoa , zoology , genetics , dna , gene , genotype
Phylogenetic and taxonomic studies on ciliate protists using molecular approaches have been demonstrated to be very reliable to form strong conclusions and results. In the present work, species separation of some morphologically similar stichotrichous ciliates, two species of Pseudokeronopsis and two species of Apokeronopsis, was reexamined using amplified ribosomal DNA restriction analysis (PCR-RFLP). Five of 10 restriction enzymes revealed species-specific polymorphic patterns, of which four similar stichotrichs could be significantly separated and identified. Among them, EcoR I offered almost no significantly different restriction fragment patterns, but the four species could be separated from one another and identified with Hae Ⅲ. Distinctly different restriction digestion haplotypes and simi-larity indices separated the species, and were used to construct a phylogeny. Phylogenies based on ITS2 nucleotide sequences and ITS2 secondary structures supported the separation of Pseudokeronopsis and Apokeronopsis using RFLP analysis, although three Pseudoker-onopsis carnea populations did not cluster together. In addition, phylogenetic analyses using multiple algorithms confirmed that these two genera formed two distinct groups within the urostylids.

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