Taxonomic Sampling and Rare Genomic Changes Overcome Long-Branch Attraction in the Phylogenetic Placement of Pseudoscorpions

Author:

Ontano Andrew Z1,Gainett Guilherme1ORCID,Aharon Shlomi2ORCID,Ballesteros Jesús A1,Benavides Ligia R3ORCID,Corbett Kevin F1,Gavish-Regev Efrat2ORCID,Harvey Mark S4ORCID,Monsma Scott5,Santibáñez-López Carlos E6ORCID,Setton Emily V W1,Zehms Jakob T1,Zeh Jeanne A7ORCID,Zeh David W7ORCID,Sharma Prashant P1ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Integrative Biology, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA

2. National Natural History Collections, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem, Jerusalem, Israel

3. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, USA

4. Collections & Research, Western Australian Museum, Welshpool, WA, Australia

5. Lucigen Corporation, Middleton, WU, USA

6. Department of Biology, Eastern Connecticut State University, Willimantic, CT, USA

7. Department of Biology and Program in Ecology, Evolution & Conservation Biology, University of Nevada, Reno, NV, USA

Abstract

Abstract Long-branch attraction is a systematic artifact that results in erroneous groupings of fast-evolving taxa. The combination of short, deep internodes in tandem with long-branch attraction artifacts has produced empirically intractable parts of the Tree of Life. One such group is the arthropod subphylum Chelicerata, whose backbone phylogeny has remained unstable despite improvements in phylogenetic methods and genome-scale data sets. Pseudoscorpion placement is particularly variable across data sets and analytical frameworks, with this group either clustering with other long-branch orders or with Arachnopulmonata (scorpions and tetrapulmonates). To surmount long-branch attraction, we investigated the effect of taxonomic sampling via sequential deletion of basally branching pseudoscorpion superfamilies, as well as varying gene occupancy thresholds in supermatrices. We show that concatenated supermatrices and coalescent-based summary species tree approaches support a sister group relationship of pseudoscorpions and scorpions, when more of the basally branching taxa are sampled. Matrix completeness had demonstrably less influence on tree topology. As an external arbiter of phylogenetic placement, we leveraged the recent discovery of an ancient genome duplication in the common ancestor of Arachnopulmonata as a litmus test for competing hypotheses of pseudoscorpion relationships. We generated a high-quality developmental transcriptome and the first genome for pseudoscorpions to assess the incidence of arachnopulmonate-specific duplications (e.g., homeobox genes and miRNAs). Our results support the inclusion of pseudoscorpions in Arachnopulmonata (new definition), as the sister group of scorpions. Panscorpiones (new name) is proposed for the clade uniting Scorpiones and Pseudoscorpiones.

Funder

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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