4.8 Article

A Large and Consistent Phylogenomic Dataset Supports Sponges as the Sister Group to All Other Animals

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 27, Issue 7, Pages 958-967

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.02.031

Keywords

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Funding

  1. Institut Universitaire de France
  2. TULIP Laboratory of Excellence [ANR-10-LABX-41]
  3. Canada Foundation for Innovation (CFI)
  4. ministere de l'Economie, de la science et de l'innovation du Quebec (MESI)
  5. Fonds de recherche du Quebec-Nature et technologies (FRQ-NT)
  6. National Defense Science and Engineering Graduate fellowship from the United States Department of Defense
  7. National Science Foundation Central Europe Summer Research Institute Fellowship
  8. Chang-Lin Tien Fellowship in Environmental Sciences and Biodiversity
  9. Conseil Regional de Bretagne
  10. French Government Investissements d'Avenir'' program OCEANOMICS [ANR-11-BTBR-0008]
  11. German Research Foundation (Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [DFG])
  12. Ludwig-Maximilians-Universitat Munchen LMUexcellent program (Project MODELSPONGE) through the German Excellence Initiative

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Resolving the early diversification of animal lineages has proven difficult, even using genome-scale datasets. Several phylogenomic studies have supported the classical scenario in which sponges (Porifera) are the sister group to all other animals (Porifera-sister3 hypothesis), consistent with a single origin of the gut, nerve cells, and muscle cells in the stem lineage of eumetazoans (bilaterians + ctenophores + cnidarians). In contrast, several other studies have recovered an alternative topology in which ctenophores are the sister group to all other animals (including sponges). The Ctenophora-sister hypothesis implies that eumetazoan-specific traits, such as neurons and muscle cells, either evolved once along the metazoan stem lineage and were then lost in sponges and placozoans or evolved at least twice independently in Ctenophora and in Cnidaria + Bilateria. Here, we report on our reconstruction of deep metazoan relationships using a 1,719-gene dataset with dense taxonomic sampling of non-bilaterian animals that was assembled using a semi-automated procedure, designed to reduce known error sources. Our dataset outperforms previous metazoan gene superalignments in terms of data quality and quantity. Analyses with a best-fitting site-heterogeneous evolutionary model provide strong statistical support for placing sponges as the sister-group to all other metazoans, with ctenophores emerging as the second-earliest branching animal lineage. Only those methodological settings that exacerbated long-branch attraction artifacts yielded Ctenophora-sister. These results show that methodological issues must be carefully addressed to tackle difficult phylogenetic questions and pave the road to a better understanding of how fundamental features of animal body plans have emerged.

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