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Mitogenomics reveals high synteny and long evolutionary histories of sympatric cryptic nematode species
Author(s) -
Grosemans Tara,
Morris Krystalynne,
Thomas William Kelley,
Rigaux Annelien,
Moens Tom,
Derycke Sofie
Publication year - 2016
Publication title -
ecology and evolution
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.17
H-Index - 63
ISSN - 2045-7758
DOI - 10.1002/ece3.1975
Subject(s) - biology , species complex , sympatric speciation , synteny , nonsynonymous substitution , evolutionary biology , phylogenetic tree , genome , mitochondrial dna , phylogenetics , gene , genetic algorithm , genetics
Species with seemingly identical morphology but with distinct genetic differences are abundant in the marine environment and frequently co‐occur in the same habitat. Such cryptic species are typically delineated using a limited number of mitochondrial and/or nuclear marker genes, which do not yield information on gene order and gene content of the genomes under consideration. We used next‐generation sequencing to study the composition of the mitochondrial genomes of four sympatrically distributed cryptic species of the Litoditis marina species complex (PmI, Pm II , Pm III , and Pm IV ). The ecology, biology, and natural occurrence of these four species are well known, but the evolutionary processes behind this cryptic speciation remain largely unknown. The gene order of the mitochondrial genomes of the four species was conserved, but differences in genome length, gene length, and codon usage were observed. The atp8 gene was lacking in all four species. Phylogenetic analyses confirm that PmI and Pm IV are sister species and that Pm III diverged earliest. The most recent common ancestor of the four cryptic species was estimated to have diverged 16 MYA . Synonymous mutations outnumbered nonsynonymous changes in all protein‐encoding genes, with the Complex IV genes ( coxI‐ III ) experiencing the strongest purifying selection. Our mitogenomic results show that morphologically similar species can have long evolutionary histories and that Pm III has several differences in genetic makeup compared to the three other species, which may explain why it is better adapted to higher temperatures than the other species.

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