Scripps Institution of Oceanography, UCSD, 9500 Gilman Drive, La Jolla 92093, CA, USA.
BMC Evol Biol. 2014 Aug 28;14:170. doi: 10.1186/s12862-014-0170-7.
Myzostomids are marine annelids, nearly all of which live symbiotically on or inside echinoderms, chiefly crinoids, and to a lesser extent asteroids and ophiuroids. These symbionts possess a variety of adult body plans and lifestyles. Most described species live freely on the exterior of their hosts as adults (though starting life on the host inside cysts), while other taxa permanently reside in galls, cysts, or within the host's mouth, digestive system, coelom, or gonads. Myzostomid lifestyles range from stealing incoming food from the host's food grooves to consuming the host's tissue directly. Previous molecular studies of myzostomids have had limited sampling with respect to assessing the evolutionary relationships within the group; therefore molecular data from 75 myzostomid taxa were analyzed using maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony methods. To compare relationships of myzostomids with their hosts, a phylogeny was inferred for 53 hosts and a tanglegram constructed with 88 associations.
Gall- and some cyst-dwellers were recovered as a clade, while cyst-to-free-living forms were found as a grade including two clades of internal host-eaters (one infecting crinoids and the other asteroids and ophiuroids), mouth/digestive system inhabitants, and other cyst-dwellers. Clades of myzostomids were recovered that associated with asteroids, ophiuroids, and stalked or feather star crinoids. Co-phylogenetic analyses rejected a null-hypothesis of random associations at the global level, but not for individual associations. Event-based analyses relied most upon host-switching and duplication events to reconcile the association history.
Hypotheses were revised concerning the systematics and evolution of Myzostomida, as well their relationships to their hosts. We found two or three transitions between food-stealing and host-eating. Taxa that dwell within the mouth or digestive system and some cyst forms are arguably derived from cyst-to-free-living ancestors--possibly the result of a free-living form moving to the mouth and paedomorphic retention of the juvenile cyst. Phylogenetic conservatism in host use was observed among related myzostomid taxa. This finding suggests that myzostomids (which have a free-living planktonic stage) are limited to one or a few closely related hosts, despite most hosts co-occurring on the same reefs, many within physical contact of each other.
粘体动物门是海洋环节动物,几乎所有物种都与棘皮动物共生,主要是海百合类动物,其次是海星类和蛇尾类动物。这些共生体具有多种成体形态和生活方式。大多数描述的物种成年后自由地生活在宿主的外部(尽管从宿主内部的包囊中开始生命),而其他分类群则永久地存在于包囊、囊肿或宿主的口中、消化系统、体腔或生殖腺中。粘体动物的生活方式从从宿主的食物槽中窃取食物到直接食用宿主的组织不等。以前对粘体动物的分子研究在评估组内进化关系方面的样本有限;因此,使用最大似然法和最大简约法分析了 75 种粘体动物的分子数据。为了比较粘体动物与其宿主的关系,对 53 种宿主进行了系统发育推断,并构建了 88 个关联的缠结图。
发现囊肿和一些包囊居住者为一个分支,而包囊到自由生活形式则为一个等级,包括两个内部宿主食者(一个感染海百合类动物,另一个感染海星类和蛇尾类动物)、口/消化系统居民和其他包囊居住者的分支。发现与海星类动物、蛇尾类动物和有柄或羽星海百合类动物相关的粘体动物分支。共发生分析拒绝了全球水平上随机关联的零假设,但对于个别关联则没有。基于事件的分析最依赖于宿主转换和复制事件来协调关联历史。
修订了关于粘体动物门的系统学和进化以及它们与宿主的关系的假说。我们发现了两到三次从偷窃食物到捕食宿主的转变。居住在口腔或消化系统内的分类群和一些包囊形式可以说是从包囊到自由生活的祖先衍生而来的,可能是自由生活形式移动到口腔并保留了幼年包囊的幼态延续。在相关的粘体动物分类群中观察到宿主利用的系统发育保守性。这一发现表明,粘体动物(具有自由生活的浮游阶段)仅限于一个或少数几个密切相关的宿主,尽管大多数宿主都在同一珊瑚礁上共存,许多宿主之间彼此物理接触。