Abstract

BackgroundThe thin-spined porcupine, also known as the bristle-spined rat, Chaetomys subspinosus (Olfers, 1818), the only member of its genus, figures among Brazilian endangered species. In addition to being threatened, it is poorly known, and even its taxonomic status at the family level has long been controversial. The genus Chaetomys was originally regarded as a porcupine in the family Erethizontidae, but some authors classified it as a spiny-rat in the family Echimyidae. Although the dispute seems to be settled in favor of the erethizontid advocates, further discussion of its affinities should be based on a phylogenetic framework. In the present study, we used nucleotide-sequence data from the complete mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and karyotypic information to address this issue. Our molecular analyses included one individual of Chaetomys subspinosus from the state of Bahia in northeastern Brazil, and other hystricognaths.ResultsAll topologies recovered in our molecular phylogenetic analyses strongly supported Chaetomys subspinosus as a sister clade of the erethizontids. Cytogenetically, Chaetomys subspinosus showed 2n = 52 and FN = 76. Although the sexual pair could not be identified, we assumed that the X chromosome is biarmed. The karyotype included 13 large to medium metacentric and submetacentric chromosome pairs, one small subtelocentric pair, and 12 small acrocentric pairs. The subtelocentric pair 14 had a terminal secondary constriction in the short arm, corresponding to the nucleolar organizer region (Ag-NOR), similar to the erethizontid Sphiggurus villosus, 2n = 42 and FN = 76, and different from the echimyids, in which the secondary constriction is interstitial.ConclusionBoth molecular phylogenies and karyotypical evidence indicated that Chaetomys is closely related to the Erethizontidae rather than to the Echimyidae, although in a basal position relative to the rest of the Erethizontidae. The high levels of molecular and morphological divergence suggest that Chaetomys belongs to an early radiation of the Erethizontidae that may have occurred in the Early Miocene, and should be assigned to its own subfamily, the Chaetomyinae.

Highlights

  • The thin-spined porcupine, known as the bristle-spined rat, Chaetomys subspinosus (Olfers, 1818), the only member of its genus, figures among Brazilian endangered species

  • The sexual pair could not be identified, we assumed that the X chromosome is biarmed, considering that: (1) the X chromosome of most placental mammals comprises about five percent of the genome; (2) the X chromosome in hystricognaths is rarely small and often biarmed; (3) all the acrocentric chromosomes of Chaetomys subspinosus are small

  • A species-specific karyotype The karyotype observed in Chaetomys subspinosus differs in diploid (2n = 52) and fundamental (FN = 76) numbers from all echimyid or erethizontid karyotypes investigated so far, suggesting that this karyotype is species-specific for Chaetomys subspinosus

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Summary

Introduction

The thin-spined porcupine, known as the bristle-spined rat, Chaetomys subspinosus (Olfers, 1818), the only member of its genus, figures among Brazilian endangered species. The family Erethizontidae, the New World porcupines, is widely considered a primitive clade among caviomorph rodents, and probably diverged early in the evolutionary history of the New World hystricognaths Bonvicino et al [7] used the mitochondrial cytochrome b gene and karyologic data to clarify the taxonomic status of Coendou and Sphiggurus. Both kinds of data demonstrated that Coendou and Sphiggurus represent two evolutionary lineages. Their comparative analyses of the karyotypes showed that species of Coendou are karyologically conservative, sharing the same diploid and fundamental numbers. Species of Sphiggurus, on the other hand, diverge in diploid number they share the same fundamental number

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