Abstract

The phylum Nematoda encompasses numerous free-living as well as parasitic members, including the widely used animal model Caenorhabditis elegans, with significant impact on human health, agriculture, and environment. In view of the importance of nematodes, it is of much interest to identify novel molecular characteristics that are distinctive features of this phylum, or specific taxonomic groups/clades within it, thereby providing innovative means for diagnostics as well as genetic and biochemical studies. Using genome sequences for 52 available nematodes, a robust phylogenetic tree was constructed based on concatenated sequences of 17 conserved proteins. The branching of species in this tree provides important insights into the evolutionary relationships among the studied nematode species. In parallel, detailed comparative analyses on protein sequences from nematodes (Caenorhabditis) species reported here have identified 52 novel molecular signatures (or synapomorphies) consisting of conserved signature indels (CSIs) in different proteins, which are uniquely shared by the homologs from either all genome-sequenced Caenorhabditis species or a number of higher taxonomic clades of nematodes encompassing this genus. Of these molecular signatures, 39 CSIs in proteins involved in diverse functions are uniquely present in all Caenorhabditis species providing reliable means for distinguishing this group of nematodes in molecular terms. The remainder of the CSIs are specific for a number of higher clades of nematodes and offer important insights into the evolutionary relationships among these species. The structural locations of some of the nematodes-specific CSIs were also mapped in the structural models of the corresponding proteins. All of the studied CSIs are localized within the surface-exposed loops of the proteins suggesting that they may potentially be involved in mediating novel protein–protein or protein–ligand interactions, which are specific for these groups of nematodes. The identified CSIs, due to their exclusivity for the indicated groups, provide reliable means for the identification of species within these nematodes groups in molecular terms. Further, due to the predicted roles of these CSIs in cellular functions, they provide important tools for genetic and biochemical studies in Caenorhabditis and other nematodes.

Highlights

  • Animals of the phylum Nematoda represent a large and diverse group of eukaryotes present in various marine, freshwater, and terrestrial ecosystems [1,2,3]

  • To construct a phylogenetic tree for 52 genome sequenced nematode species, sequences of 17 conserved proteins involved in a variety of cellular functions, which were present in a single copy in these genomes were identified (Table S1)

  • Evolutionary relationships of the nematodes species in the past have been mainly studied based on gene sequences for 18S or 28S ribosomal RNA (rRNA) and mitochondrial proteins [2,4,6,34]

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Summary

Introduction

Animals of the phylum Nematoda represent a large and diverse group of eukaryotes present in various marine, freshwater, and terrestrial ecosystems [1,2,3]. Genome sequences are currently available for 52 nematode species, providing good coverage of several important groups within the phylum Nematoda [40] These sequences serve as a valuable resource for a more reliable understanding of the evolutionary relationships amongst the species [41] and for identifying novel molecular characteristics that are uniquely shared within specific groups/clades of nematodes. We have used the genome sequences of 52 nematode species to construct a phylogenetic tree for the nematodes based on concatenated sequences of 17 conserved proteins This tree provides important insights into the evolutionary relationships amongst the nematodes, and a number of major groups/taxa within the phylum Nematoda are reliably resolved. The described molecular markers, due to their exclusivity for the specific groups of nematodes, provide useful means for the development of novel diagnostics as well as for genetic and biochemical studies on this important group of organisms

Construction of Phylogenetic Trees
Homology Modelling and Analysis of Protein Structures
Results
Methods
Localizations of the CSIs in Protein Structures
Discussion
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