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MBE Advance Access originally published online on June 21, 2006
Molecular Biology and Evolution 2006 23(9):1792-1800; doi:10.1093/molbev/msl044
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© The Author 2006. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. All rights reserved. For permissions, please e-mail: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Research Article

Phylum-Wide Analysis of SSU rDNA Reveals Deep Phylogenetic Relationships among Nematodes and Accelerated Evolution toward Crown Clades

Martijn Holterman*,1, Andre van der Wurff*,1, Sven van den Elsen*,1, Hanny van Megen*, Tom Bongers*, Oleksandr Holovachov{dagger}, Jaap Bakker* and Johannes Helder*

* Laboratory of Nematology, Department of Plant Sciences, Wageningen University, Wageningen, The Netherlands; and {dagger} Department of Zoology, Biology Faculty, Ivan Franko National University, Lviv, Ukraine

E-mail: hans.helder{at}wur.nl.

Inference of evolutionary relationships between nematodes is severely hampered by their conserved morphology, the high frequency of homoplasy, and the scarcity of phylum-wide molecular data. To study the origin of nematode radiation and to unravel the phylogenetic relationships between distantly related species, 339 nearly full-length small-subunit rDNA sequences were analyzed from a diverse range of nematodes. Bayesian inference revealed a backbone comprising 12 consecutive dichotomies that subdivided the phylum Nematoda into 12 clades. The most basal clade is dominated by the subclass Enoplia, and members of the order Triplonchida occupy positions most close to the common ancestor of the nematodes. Crown Clades 8–12, a group formerly indicated as "Secernentea" that includes Caenorhabditis elegans and virtually all major plant and animal parasites, show significantly higher nucleotide substitution rates than the more basal Clades 1–7. Accelerated substitution rates are associated with parasitic lifestyles (Clades 8 and 12) or short generation times (Clades 9–11). The relatively high substitution rates in the distal clades resulted in numerous autapomorphies that allow in most cases DNA barcode–based species identification. Teratocephalus, a genus comprising terrestrial bacterivores, was shown to be most close to the starting point of Secernentean radiation. Notably, fungal feeding nematodes were exclusively found basal to or as sister taxon next to the 3 groups of plant parasitic nematodes, namely, Trichodoridae, Longidoridae, and Tylenchomorpha. The exclusive common presence of fungivorous and plant parasitic nematodes supports a long-standing hypothesis that states that plant parasitic nematodes arose from fungivorous ancestors.

Key Words: nematode evolution • SSU rDNA • accelerated evolution


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