TL;DR: This study illustrates the complexity of the evolutionary processes associated with asexuality and identifies L. pseudolacteus as a promising model to study the first steps of polyploid genome evolution in an asexual context.
Abstract: Comparative population genetics in asexual vs sexual species offers the opportunity to investigate the impact of asexuality on genome evolution Here, we analyse coding sequence polymorphism and d
TL;DR: The isolation and identification of Hox genes in Lineus sanguineus is presented and it is found that the Lineus genome contains a single cluster of at least six H Cox genes: two anterior- class genes, three middle-class genes, and one posterior-class gene.
Abstract: From our current understanding of the genetic basis of development and pattern formation in Drosophila and vertebrates it is commonly thought that clusters of Hox genes sculpt the morphology of animals in specific body regions. Based on Hox gene conservation throughout the animal kingdom it is proposed that these genes and their role in pattern formation evolved early during the evolution of metazoans. Knowledge of the history of Hox genes will lead to a better understanding of the role of Hox genes in the evolution of animal body plans. To infer Hox gene evolution, reliable data on lower chordates and invertebrates are crucial. Among the lower triploblasts, the body plan of the ribbonworm Lineus (nemertini) appears to be close to the common ancestral condition of protostomes and deuterostomes. In this paper we present the isolation and identification of Hox genes in Lineus sanguineus. We find that the Lineus genome contains a single cluster of at least six Hox genes: two anterior-class genes, three middle-class genes, and one posterior-class gene. Each of the genes can be definitely assigned to an ortholog group on the basis of its homeobox and its flanking sequences. The most closely related homeodomain sequences are invariably found among the mouse or Amphioxus orthologs, rather than Drosophila and other invertebrates. This suggests that the ribbonworms have diverged relatively little from the last common ancestors of protostomes and deuterostomes, the urbilateria.
TL;DR: A literature-based taxonomic catalogue of the nemertean species (Phylum Nemertea) reported from Japanese waters is provided, listing 19 families, 45 genera, and 120 species as valid.
Abstract: A literature-based taxonomic catalogue of the nemertean species (Phylum Nemertea) reported from Japanese waters is provided, listing 19 families, 45 genera, and 120 species as valid. Applications of the following species names to forms previously recorded from Japanese waters are regarded as uncertain: Amphiporus cervicalis, Amphiporus depressus, Amphiporus lactifloreus, Cephalothrix filiformis, Cephalothrix linearis, Cerebratulus fuscus, Lineus vegetus, Lineus bilineatus, Lineus gesserensis, Lineus grubei, Lineus longifissus, Lineus mcintoshii, Nipponnemertes pulchra, Oerstedia venusta, Prostoma graecense, and Prostoma grande. The identities of the taxa referred to by the following four nominal species require clarification through future investigations: Cosmocephala japonica, Dicelis rubra, Dichilus obscurus, and Nareda serpentina. The nominal species established from Japanese waters are tabulated. In addition, a brief history of taxonomic research on Japanese nemerteans is reviewed.
TL;DR: Extracts of two species of ribbon worm, Lineus fuscoviridis and Tubulanus punctatus, had lethal potencies in mice from 15-503MU/g of worm and from less than 10-540 MU/g, respectively, and revealed the presence of tetrodotoxin and anhydrotetrodot toxin plus some unidentified compounds.
TL;DR: Two new species are described: Micrura corallifila and MicRura baltica, both of which have been identified from the Bergen area, Norway, the Gullmarfjord area on the west coast of Sweden, and the Baltic.
Abstract: Two new species are described: Micrura corallifila and Micrura baltica. Complementary descriptions of eight previously known species: Lineus albocinctus, L. bilineatus, L. ruber, L. viridis, Micrura fasciolata, M. purpurea, Cerebratulus fuscus, C. marginatus, and additional notes on the excretory organs of Oxypolella bergendali are given. Most of the material comes from the Bergen area, Norway, the Gullmarfjord area on the west coast of Sweden, and the Baltic. The morphological variability, biology, and ecology were studied. The relationships between the species are discussed.