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A phylogeny of the temperate seabasses (Moronidae) characterized by a translocation of the mt‐ nd 6 gene
Author(s) -
Williams E. P.,
Peer A. C.,
Miller T. J.,
Secor D. H.,
Place A. R.
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
journal of fish biology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.672
H-Index - 115
eISSN - 1095-8649
pISSN - 0022-1112
DOI - 10.1111/j.1095-8649.2011.03158.x
Subject(s) - biology , phylogenetics , chromosomal translocation , gene , temperate climate , evolutionary biology , genetics , zoology , ecology
The entire mitochondrial genome of the striped bass Morone saxatilis was sequenced together with the mitochondrial (mt) control regions of the white bass Morone chrysops , white perch Morone americana , yellow bass Morone mississippiensis , spotted seabass Dicentrarchus punctatus, European seabass Dicentrarchus labrax and the Japanese seabass Lateolabrax japonicus . The resultant 17 580 base pair circular genome of M. saxatilis contains 38 genes (13 proteins, 23 transfer RNAs and two ribosomal RNAs) and a control region bordered by the proline and phenylalanine mitochondrial tRNAs. Gene arrangement was similar to other vertebrates, except that the mt‐ nd 6 gene was found within the control region rather than the canonical position between the mt‐ nd 5 and mt‐ cy b genes. This translocation was found in all the Morone and Dicentrarchus species studied without functional copies or pseudogenes in the ancestral position. In L. japonicus , the mt‐ nd 6 gene was found in the canonical position without evidence of an mt‐ nd 6 gene in the control region. A Bayesian analysis of these and published mt‐ nd 6 sequences from 45 other Perciformes grouped the Morone and Dicentrarchus species monophyletically with a probability of 1·00 with respect to L. japonicus and all other perciforms, and placed the Dicentrarchus species in the basal position. These data reinforce current placement of L. japonicus outside the Moronidae and provide a clear evolutionary character to define this family. The phylogeny of the Moronidae presented here also supports the hypothesis of an anadromous common ancestor to this family that gave rise to the North American estuarine and freshwater species. A series of tandem repeats previously reported in M. saxatilis was found in the control region of all Morone species between the mt‐ nd 6 and mt‐ rnr 1 genes, but not in either Dicentrarchus species, which reinforces the continued use of these two separate genera.

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