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A very short, functionally constrained sequence diagnoses cone snails in several Conasprella clades.


ABSTRACT: The traditional taxonomy of ca. 700 cone snails assigns all species to a single genus, Conus Linnaeus 1758. However, an increasing body of evidence suggests that some belong to a phylogenetically distinct clade that is sometimes referred to as Conasprella. Previous work (Kraus et al., 2011) showed that a short (259 bp) conserved intronic sequence (CIS) of the ?-glutamyl carboxylase gene (intron 9) can be used to delineate deep phylogenetic relationships among some groups of Conus. The work described here uses intron 9 (338 bp) to resolve problematic relationships among the conasprellans and to distinguish them from Conus proper. Synapomorphic mutations at just 39 sites can resolve several groups within Conasprella because the informative region of intron 9 is so well conserved that the phylogenetic signal is not obscured by homoplasies at conflicting sites. Intron 9 also unambiguously distinguishes Conasprella as a whole from Conus because the conserved regions that are so well conserved within each group are not alignable and clearly not homologous between them. This pattern suggests that expression of the ?-glutamyl carboxylase gene may have undergone a functionally significant change in Conus or Conasprella shortly after they diverged.

SUBMITTER: Kraus NJ 

PROVIDER: S-EPMC4153599 | biostudies-literature | 2012 Oct

REPOSITORIES: biostudies-literature

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A very short, functionally constrained sequence diagnoses cone snails in several Conasprella clades.

Kraus Nicole J NJ   Watkins Maren M   Bandyopadhyay Pradip K PK   Seger Jon J   Olivera Baldomero M BM   Corneli Patrice Showers PS  

Molecular phylogenetics and evolution 20120626 1


The traditional taxonomy of ca. 700 cone snails assigns all species to a single genus, Conus Linnaeus 1758. However, an increasing body of evidence suggests that some belong to a phylogenetically distinct clade that is sometimes referred to as Conasprella. Previous work (Kraus et al., 2011) showed that a short (259 bp) conserved intronic sequence (CIS) of the γ-glutamyl carboxylase gene (intron 9) can be used to delineate deep phylogenetic relationships among some groups of Conus. The work descr  ...[more]

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