Pons Joan, Barraclough Timothy, Theodorides Kosmas, Cardoso Anabela, Vogler Alfried
Department of Entomology, The Natural History Museum, London SW7 5BD, United
Syst Biol. 2004 Aug;53(4):554-70. doi: 10.1080/10635150490472940.
The genus Cicindela (Coleoptera: Cicindelidae) is a species-rich cosmopolitan group of tiger beetles useful for comparing clade diversification worldwide. Knowledge about relationships of major groups is important for this analysis but basal nodes in Cicindela have been difficult to resolve with standard mtDNA markers. Here we developed the Mp20 gene, a single-copy nuclear marker coding for a muscle-associated protein in insects, for phylogenetic analysis of basal groups of Cicindela. Nearly full-length sequences were obtained for 51 cicindelids, including major taxonomic groups from all continents. Sequences of Mp20 were between 1.2 and 1.7 kb and spanning three introns. Phylogenetic signal of exon and intron sequences was compared with that from four gene regions of mtDNA (COI, COIII, Cytb, 16S rRNA; 2.4 kb total). Because introns differed in length, sequence alignment was conducted using various procedures of phenetic and parsimony-based character coding of indels to assess their phylogenetic information content, but major nodes were recovered consistently. Mp20 sequences contributed two thirds of the total support of the combined analysis, with most signal from the introns. We found major clades of Cicindela to be geographically largely coincident with continental regions, confined to Australasia, the Holarctic, the Indian subcontinent, Africa, and South and Central America. Clock estimates using various maximum-likelihood (ML) branch length calculations resulted in roughly similar divergence times whether Mp20 exon, introns, or mtDNA were used, and they were not greatly affected by different procedures for coding and optimizing indel characters. Based on existing clock calibrations in Cicindela, basal splits of continental lineages occurred in the mid-Miocene, placing the radiation of basal groups of Cicindela to a period when their open-vegetation habitats expanded globally.
虎甲属(鞘翅目:虎甲科)是一个物种丰富的世界性虎甲类群,有助于比较全球范围内的分支多样化。主要类群之间关系的知识对于该分析很重要,但使用标准线粒体DNA标记很难解析虎甲属的基部节点。在这里,我们开发了Mp20基因,这是一种编码昆虫肌肉相关蛋白的单拷贝核标记,用于虎甲属基部类群的系统发育分析。获得了51种虎甲的近全长序列,包括来自各大洲的主要分类群。Mp20的序列在1.2至1.7 kb之间,跨越三个内含子。将外显子和内含子序列的系统发育信号与线粒体DNA四个基因区域(COI、COIII、Cytb、16S rRNA;总计2.4 kb)的信号进行了比较。由于内含子长度不同,使用基于表型和简约的插入缺失字符编码的各种程序进行序列比对,以评估它们的系统发育信息含量,但主要节点始终一致地被恢复。Mp20序列在联合分析的总支持中占三分之二,大多数信号来自内含子。我们发现虎甲属的主要分支在地理上与大陆区域大致重合,局限于澳大拉西亚、全北区、印度次大陆、非洲以及南美洲和中美洲。使用各种最大似然(ML)分支长度计算的时钟估计,无论使用Mp20外显子、内含子还是线粒体DNA,都得出大致相似的分歧时间,并且它们受编码和优化插入缺失字符的不同程序的影响不大。根据虎甲属现有的时钟校准,大陆谱系的基部分裂发生在中新世中期,这使得虎甲属基部类群的辐射处于其开阔植被栖息地在全球范围内扩张的时期。