4.8 Article

Hox genes and the phylogeny of the arthropods

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 11, Issue 10, Pages 759-763

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/S0960-9822(01)00222-6

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The arthropods are the most speciose, and among the most morphologically diverse, of the animal phyla, Their evolution has been the subject of intense research for well over a century, yet the relationships among the four extant arthropod subphyla - chelicerates, crustaceans, hexapods, and myriapods - are still not fully resolved. Morphological taxonomies have often placed hexapods and myriapods together (the Atelocerata) [1, 2], but recent molecular studies have generally supported a hexapod/crustacean clade [2-9], A cluster of regulatory genes, the Hox genes, control segment identity in arthropods, and comparisons of the sequences and functions of Hox genes can reveal evolutionary relationships [10], We used Hox gene sequences from a range of arthropod taxa, including new data from a basal hexapod and a myriapod, to estimate a phylogeny of the arthropods. Our data support the hypothesis that insects and crustaceans form a single clade within the arthropods to the exclusion of myriapods, They also suggest that myriapods are more closely allied to the chelicerates than to this insect/crustacean clade.

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