Abstract

BackgroundUniversal nuclear protein-coding locus (NPCL) markers that are applicable across diverse taxa and show good phylogenetic discrimination have broad applications in molecular phylogenetic studies. For example, RAG1, a representative NPCL marker, has been successfully used to make phylogenetic inferences within all major osteichthyan groups. However, such markers with broad working range and high phylogenetic performance are still scarce. It is necessary to develop more universal NPCL markers comparable to RAG1 for osteichthyan phylogenetics.Methodology/Principal FindingsWe developed three long universal NPCL markers (>1.6 kb each) based on single-copy nuclear genes (KIAA1239, SACS and TTN) that possess large exons and exhibit the appropriate evolutionary rates. We then compared their phylogenetic utilities with that of the reference marker RAG1 in 47 jawed vertebrate species. In comparison with RAG1, each of the three long universal markers yielded similar topologies and branch supports, all in congruence with the currently accepted osteichthyan phylogeny. To compare their phylogenetic performance visually, we also estimated the phylogenetic informativeness (PI) profile for each of the four long universal NPCL markers. The PI curves indicated that SACS performed best over the whole timescale, while RAG1, KIAA1239 and TTN exhibited similar phylogenetic performances. In addition, we compared the success of nested PCR and standard PCR when amplifying NPCL marker fragments. The amplification success rate and efficiency of the nested PCR were overwhelmingly higher than those of standard PCR.Conclusions/SignificanceOur work clearly demonstrates the superiority of nested PCR over the conventional PCR in phylogenetic studies and develops three long universal NPCL markers (KIAA1239, SACS and TTN) with the nested PCR strategy. The three markers exhibit high phylogenetic utilities in osteichthyan phylogenetics and can be widely used as pilot genes for phylogenetic questions of osteichthyans at different taxonomic levels.

Highlights

  • Over the past two decades, nuclear protein-coding locus (NPCL) markers have become popular tools for inferring the evolutionary history between vertebrate species at different taxonomic levels [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]

  • We investigated the phylogenetic utility of three long NPCL markers (KIAA1239, SACS and TTN) together with the reference marker RAG1 among osteichthyans

  • The lengths of the large exons in RAG1, KIAA1239, SACS, and TTN that were used for the development of NPCL markers are approximately 3 kb, 3.9 kb, 11.6 kb and 17.1 kb, respectively

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Summary

Introduction

Over the past two decades, nuclear protein-coding locus (NPCL) markers have become popular tools for inferring the evolutionary history between vertebrate species at different taxonomic levels [1,2,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10]. Universal nuclear protein-coding locus (NPCL) markers that are applicable across diverse taxa and show good phylogenetic discrimination have broad applications in molecular phylogenetic studies. RAG1, a representative NPCL marker, has been successfully used to make phylogenetic inferences within all major osteichthyan groups. Such markers with broad working range and high phylogenetic performance are still scarce. It is necessary to develop more universal NPCL markers comparable to RAG1 for osteichthyan phylogenetics

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