PLoS ONE (Jan 2023)

Exploring genome gene content and morphological analysis to test recalcitrant nodes in the animal phylogeny.

  • Ksenia Juravel,
  • Luis Porras,
  • Sebastian Höhna,
  • Davide Pisani,
  • Gert Wörheide

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0282444
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 18, no. 3
p. e0282444

Abstract

Read online

An accurate phylogeny of animals is needed to clarify their evolution, ecology, and impact on shaping the biosphere. Although datasets of several hundred thousand amino acids are nowadays routinely used to test phylogenetic hypotheses, key deep nodes in the metazoan tree remain unresolved: the root of animals, the root of Bilateria, and the monophyly of Deuterostomia. Instead of using the standard approach of amino acid datasets, we performed analyses of newly assembled genome gene content and morphological datasets to investigate these recalcitrant nodes in the phylogeny of animals. We explored extensively the choices for assembling the genome gene content dataset and model choices of morphological analyses. Our results are robust to these choices and provide additional insights into the early evolution of animals, they are consistent with sponges as the sister group of all the other animals, the worm-like bilaterian lineage Xenacoelomorpha as the sister group of the other Bilateria, and tentatively support monophyletic Deuterostomia.