TY - JOUR
T1 - The big, the small and the weird
T2 - A phylogenomic analysis of extant Priapulida
AU - Raeker, Jan
AU - Lord, Arianna
AU - Herranz, María
AU - Giribet, Gonzalo
AU - Worsaae, Katrine
AU - Schmidt-Rhaesa, Andreas
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© 2025 The Author(s)
PY - 2025
Y1 - 2025
N2 - Priapulida is a small phylum of 22 described species that are divided into two size classes (microscopic and macroscopic), distinguished by adult and larval morphology. Most priapulidans are rare or live in inaccessible habitats, and freshly collected material for molecular studies is difficult to obtain. With this study, we for the first time aim to resolve the phylogeny of extant Priapulida using transcriptomic, genomic, and morphological data. We analyze six newly assembled transcriptomes alongside existing data, covering seven species and four genera. Additionally, we include genomic data from museum-preserved species, adding another genus via low-coverage genome sequencing. Conserved regions from these data produce a combined phylogenomic tree, augmented by morphological data to suggest positions for the rare taxa Acanthopriapulus and Maccabeus. Our findings show that the microscopic Meiopriapulus consistently groups as a sister taxon to other priapulidans and not with Tubiluchus, as suggested in previous studies. Maccabeus, which exhibits both size-class characteristics, is the sister taxon to all the macroscopic species, while Acanthopriapulus is a sister taxon to Priapulus, but molecular data are needed to support their suggested positions. Ancestral state reconstruction suggests that small body size, lack of caudal appendages, and internal fertilization are ancestral traits for Priapulida. This supports the derived evolution of macroscopic size and other traits in the group, aligning with its microscopic sister groups Kinorhyncha and Loricifera. Due to the diversity of priapulidans and the unique morphologies of some species, further fossil studies and potential discoveries of priapulidan microfossils are essential to fully understand the evolutionary history of this phylum.
AB - Priapulida is a small phylum of 22 described species that are divided into two size classes (microscopic and macroscopic), distinguished by adult and larval morphology. Most priapulidans are rare or live in inaccessible habitats, and freshly collected material for molecular studies is difficult to obtain. With this study, we for the first time aim to resolve the phylogeny of extant Priapulida using transcriptomic, genomic, and morphological data. We analyze six newly assembled transcriptomes alongside existing data, covering seven species and four genera. Additionally, we include genomic data from museum-preserved species, adding another genus via low-coverage genome sequencing. Conserved regions from these data produce a combined phylogenomic tree, augmented by morphological data to suggest positions for the rare taxa Acanthopriapulus and Maccabeus. Our findings show that the microscopic Meiopriapulus consistently groups as a sister taxon to other priapulidans and not with Tubiluchus, as suggested in previous studies. Maccabeus, which exhibits both size-class characteristics, is the sister taxon to all the macroscopic species, while Acanthopriapulus is a sister taxon to Priapulus, but molecular data are needed to support their suggested positions. Ancestral state reconstruction suggests that small body size, lack of caudal appendages, and internal fertilization are ancestral traits for Priapulida. This supports the derived evolution of macroscopic size and other traits in the group, aligning with its microscopic sister groups Kinorhyncha and Loricifera. Due to the diversity of priapulidans and the unique morphologies of some species, further fossil studies and potential discoveries of priapulidan microfossils are essential to fully understand the evolutionary history of this phylum.
KW - Bioinformatics
KW - Genome skimming
KW - Morphology
KW - Phylogeny
KW - Priapulida
KW - Transcriptome
U2 - 10.1016/j.ympev.2025.108297
DO - 10.1016/j.ympev.2025.108297
M3 - Journal article
C2 - 39884518
AN - SCOPUS:85216546285
VL - 204
JO - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
JF - Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution
SN - 1055-7903
M1 - 108297
ER -