The Phylogeny and the Evolution of Parasitic Strategies in Trematoda
- Chuanyu Xiang,
- Ivan Jakovlić,
- Ye Hu,
- Tong Ye,
- Rui Song,
- Hong Zou,
- Guitang Wang,
- Wenxiang Li,
- Dong Zhang
Hong Zou
Key Laboratory of Aquaculture Disease Control, Ministry of Agriculture, and State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, P. R. China.
Author ProfileGuitang Wang
Key Laboratory of Aquaculture Disease Control, Ministry of Agriculture, and State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, P. R. China.
Author ProfileWenxiang Li
Key Laboratory of Aquaculture Disease Control, Ministry of Agriculture, and State Key Laboratory of Freshwater Ecology and Biotechnology, Institute of Hydrobiology, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Wuhan 430072, P. R. China.
Author ProfileDong Zhang
Lanzhou University
Corresponding Author:dongzhang0725@gmail.com
Author ProfileAbstract
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Trematodes are obligatory parasites that generally must transmit between
hosts to complete life cycle. These strategies entail parasitizing
diverse intermediate hosts, yet their evolutionary trajectory and
ancestral origins remain elusive. We conducted the ancestral state
reconstruction of the number of intermediate hosts using mitogenomic
(Trematoda) and nuclear-genomic (Neodermata) topologies. Aspidogastrea
was identified as the sister-group (basal) to all other Trematoda using
a range of approaches, so it is crucial for studying the evolutionary
history of trematodes. Unfortunately, mitogenome of this lineage still
inaccessible. Herein, we sequenced mitogenomes of two aspidogastreans:
Aspidogaster ijimai and Aspidogaster conchicola. As the ancestral state
reconstruction analysis is topology-sensitive, we tested multiple
phylogenetic strategies, comprising the outgroup selection, phylogenetic
models, partitioning strategies, and topological constraints. Based on
our analyses, Cestoda was the optimal outgroup choice, and the
heterogeneous CAT-GTR model in PhyloBayes was the optimal model choice.
We inferred the time tree and conducted ancestral state reconstruction
analyses using this optimal topology, as well as constrained mitogenomic
and nuclear genomic topologies. Results were ambiguous for some
lineages, but scenario that received the strongest support is the direct
life cycle (no intermediate hosts) in the ancestors of Trematoda
(proto-trematodes) and Aspidogastrea (proto-aspidogastreans), while the
ancestor of Digenea (proto-digeneans) had two intermediate hosts. The
inferred scenario indicates that host strategies are relatively plastic
among trematodes, putatively comprising several independent host gains,
and multiple host losses. We propose a timeline for these events and
discuss the role played in the evolution of complex parasitic life
histories in digeneans.