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Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate

BACKGROUND: Paedocypris, a highly developmentally truncated fish from peat swamp forests in Southeast Asia, comprises the world's smallest vertebrate. Although clearly a cyprinid fish, a hypothesis about its phylogenetic position among the subfamilies of this largest teleost family, with over 2...

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Autores principales: Rüber, Lukas, Kottelat, Maurice, Tan, Heok Hui, Ng, Peter KL, Britz, Ralf
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1838906/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17355618
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-38
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author Rüber, Lukas
Kottelat, Maurice
Tan, Heok Hui
Ng, Peter KL
Britz, Ralf
author_facet Rüber, Lukas
Kottelat, Maurice
Tan, Heok Hui
Ng, Peter KL
Britz, Ralf
author_sort Rüber, Lukas
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Paedocypris, a highly developmentally truncated fish from peat swamp forests in Southeast Asia, comprises the world's smallest vertebrate. Although clearly a cyprinid fish, a hypothesis about its phylogenetic position among the subfamilies of this largest teleost family, with over 2400 species, does not exist. Here we present a phylogenetic analyses of 227 cypriniform taxa, including 213 cyprinids, based upon complete mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b nucleotide sequences in order to determine the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris and to study the evolution of miniaturization among cyprinids. RESULTS: Our analyses reveal a strongly supported sister group relationship (clade C) between Paedocypris and Sundadanio, another developmentally truncated miniature cyprinid. Clade C was resolved as sister group of a larger clade characterized by small rasborine taxa (clade D). We found that miniaturised taxa are more numerous in the rasborine clade A, formed by clades C and D, than in any other cyprinid clade. The consensus cytb in cyprinids includes 380 amino acids and an incomplete T–– stop codon. We noted that a few cyprinids mostly rasborine taxa placed within clade A had either a TAA or TAG stop codon, 376, 378, or 381 amino acids, and up to 10 base pairs (bp) of noncoding region before the 5' end of the tRNA-Thr. Our relaxed molecular clock estimates revealed high divergence times for the Sundadanio and Paedocypris clades and provide a first temporal framework for the evolution of miniaturization among cyprinids. CONCLUSION: Paedocypris belongs to a clade (Rasborinae clade A) that shows recurrent miniaturization, including both taxa characterized by developmental truncation and by proportioned dwarfism. Its closest relative is another miniaturized taxon, the genus Sundadanio. We conclude that the miniaturized cyprinids with remarkable morphological novelties, like Paedocypris and Danionella, are at the same time the most developmentally truncated taxa. The miniaturized cyprinids with no or few developmental truncations like Boraras, Microrasbora, and Horadandia show no such evolutionary novelties.
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spelling pubmed-18389062007-03-29 Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate Rüber, Lukas Kottelat, Maurice Tan, Heok Hui Ng, Peter KL Britz, Ralf BMC Evol Biol Research Article BACKGROUND: Paedocypris, a highly developmentally truncated fish from peat swamp forests in Southeast Asia, comprises the world's smallest vertebrate. Although clearly a cyprinid fish, a hypothesis about its phylogenetic position among the subfamilies of this largest teleost family, with over 2400 species, does not exist. Here we present a phylogenetic analyses of 227 cypriniform taxa, including 213 cyprinids, based upon complete mitochondrial DNA cytochrome b nucleotide sequences in order to determine the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris and to study the evolution of miniaturization among cyprinids. RESULTS: Our analyses reveal a strongly supported sister group relationship (clade C) between Paedocypris and Sundadanio, another developmentally truncated miniature cyprinid. Clade C was resolved as sister group of a larger clade characterized by small rasborine taxa (clade D). We found that miniaturised taxa are more numerous in the rasborine clade A, formed by clades C and D, than in any other cyprinid clade. The consensus cytb in cyprinids includes 380 amino acids and an incomplete T–– stop codon. We noted that a few cyprinids mostly rasborine taxa placed within clade A had either a TAA or TAG stop codon, 376, 378, or 381 amino acids, and up to 10 base pairs (bp) of noncoding region before the 5' end of the tRNA-Thr. Our relaxed molecular clock estimates revealed high divergence times for the Sundadanio and Paedocypris clades and provide a first temporal framework for the evolution of miniaturization among cyprinids. CONCLUSION: Paedocypris belongs to a clade (Rasborinae clade A) that shows recurrent miniaturization, including both taxa characterized by developmental truncation and by proportioned dwarfism. Its closest relative is another miniaturized taxon, the genus Sundadanio. We conclude that the miniaturized cyprinids with remarkable morphological novelties, like Paedocypris and Danionella, are at the same time the most developmentally truncated taxa. The miniaturized cyprinids with no or few developmental truncations like Boraras, Microrasbora, and Horadandia show no such evolutionary novelties. BioMed Central 2007-03-13 /pmc/articles/PMC1838906/ /pubmed/17355618 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-38 Text en Copyright © 2007 Rüber et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Rüber, Lukas
Kottelat, Maurice
Tan, Heok Hui
Ng, Peter KL
Britz, Ralf
Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
title Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
title_full Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
title_fullStr Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
title_full_unstemmed Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
title_short Evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of Paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
title_sort evolution of miniaturization and the phylogenetic position of paedocypris, comprising the world's smallest vertebrate
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1838906/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/17355618
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-38
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