Testing ultraconserved elements (UCEs) for phylogenetic inference across bivalves (Mollusca: Bivalvia)

[Display omitted] •We designed an ultraconserved elements probe set for the molluscan class Bivalvia.•The probe set successfully captured 1,513 UCEs for a total of 263,800 bp.•It captured large numbers of UCEs for museum specimens collected before 1900.•The probe set recovered similar numbers of UCE...

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Published inMolecular phylogenetics and evolution Vol. 198; p. 108129
Main Authors González-Delgado, Sara, Rodríguez-Flores, Paula C., Giribet, Gonzalo
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States Elsevier Inc 01.09.2024
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ISSN1055-7903
1095-9513
1095-9513
DOI10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108129

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Summary:[Display omitted] •We designed an ultraconserved elements probe set for the molluscan class Bivalvia.•The probe set successfully captured 1,513 UCEs for a total of 263,800 bp.•It captured large numbers of UCEs for museum specimens collected before 1900.•The probe set recovered similar numbers of UCEs from fresh samples and old DNAs.•The UCEs resolve most nodes in the bivalve tree, from deep to shallow relationships. Bivalves constitute an important resource for fisheries and as cultural objects. Bivalve phylogenetics has had a long tradition using both morphological and molecular characters, and genomic resources are available for a good number of commercially important species. However, relationships among bivalve families have been unstable and major conflicting results exist between mitogenomics and results based on Sanger-based amplicon sequencing or phylotranscriptomics. Here we design and test an ultraconserved elements probe set for the class Bivalvia with the aim to use hundreds of loci without the need to sequence full genomes or transcriptomes, which are expensive and complex to analyze, and to open bivalve phylogenetics to museum specimens. Our probe set successfully captured 1,513 UCEs for a total of 263,800 bp with an average length of 174.59 ± 3.44 per UCE (ranging from 28 to 842 bp). Phylogenetic testing of this UCE probe set across Bivalvia and within the family Donacidae using different data matrices and methods for phylogenetic inference shows promising results at multiple taxonomic levels. In addition, our probe set was able to capture large numbers of UCEs for museum specimens collected before 1900 and from DNAs properly stored, of which many museums and laboratories are well stocked. Overall, this constitutes a novel and useful resource for bivalve phylogenetics.
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ISSN:1055-7903
1095-9513
1095-9513
DOI:10.1016/j.ympev.2024.108129