Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances
The phylogeny of the Salmonidae family, the only living one of the Order Salmoniformes, remains still unclear because of several reasons. Such reasons include insufficient taxon sampling and/or DNA information. The use of complete mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomics) could provide some light on it,...
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doaj-025f614269274bdfa1d8424a4cd246352020-11-25T02:02:22ZengPeerJ Inc.PeerJ2167-83592017-09-015e382810.7717/peerj.3828Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advancesJose L. Horreo0Department of Biodiversity and Evolutionary Biology, National Museum of Natural Sciences (CSIC), Madrid, SpainThe phylogeny of the Salmonidae family, the only living one of the Order Salmoniformes, remains still unclear because of several reasons. Such reasons include insufficient taxon sampling and/or DNA information. The use of complete mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomics) could provide some light on it, but despite the high number of mitogenomes of species belonging to this family published during last years, an integrative work containing all this information has not been done. In this work, the phylogeny of 46 Salmonidae species was inferred from their mitogenomic sequences. Results include a Bayesian molecular-dated phylogenetic tree with very high statistical support showing Coregoninae and Salmoninae as sister subfamilies, as well as several new phylogenetic relationships among species and genus of the family. All these findings contribute to improve our understanding of the Salmonidae systematics and could have consequences on related evolutionary studies, as well as highlight the importance of revisiting phylogenies with integrative studies.https://peerj.com/articles/3828.pdfSalmonidSalmonidaeCoregoninaeThymallinaeSalmoninaeEvolution |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Jose L. Horreo |
spellingShingle |
Jose L. Horreo Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances PeerJ Salmonid Salmonidae Coregoninae Thymallinae Salmoninae Evolution |
author_facet |
Jose L. Horreo |
author_sort |
Jose L. Horreo |
title |
Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances |
title_short |
Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances |
title_full |
Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances |
title_fullStr |
Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances |
title_full_unstemmed |
Revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of Salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances |
title_sort |
revisiting the mitogenomic phylogeny of salmoninae: new insights thanks to recent sequencing advances |
publisher |
PeerJ Inc. |
series |
PeerJ |
issn |
2167-8359 |
publishDate |
2017-09-01 |
description |
The phylogeny of the Salmonidae family, the only living one of the Order Salmoniformes, remains still unclear because of several reasons. Such reasons include insufficient taxon sampling and/or DNA information. The use of complete mitochondrial genomes (mitogenomics) could provide some light on it, but despite the high number of mitogenomes of species belonging to this family published during last years, an integrative work containing all this information has not been done. In this work, the phylogeny of 46 Salmonidae species was inferred from their mitogenomic sequences. Results include a Bayesian molecular-dated phylogenetic tree with very high statistical support showing Coregoninae and Salmoninae as sister subfamilies, as well as several new phylogenetic relationships among species and genus of the family. All these findings contribute to improve our understanding of the Salmonidae systematics and could have consequences on related evolutionary studies, as well as highlight the importance of revisiting phylogenies with integrative studies. |
topic |
Salmonid Salmonidae Coregoninae Thymallinae Salmoninae Evolution |
url |
https://peerj.com/articles/3828.pdf |
work_keys_str_mv |
AT joselhorreo revisitingthemitogenomicphylogenyofsalmoninaenewinsightsthankstorecentsequencingadvances |
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1724953352777760768 |