Brooding Phylogenomics: Target‐Capture Probe Sets for the Analysis of Ultraconserved Elements in the Peracarida
Andrew G. Cannizzaro, David J. Berg

TL;DR
This paper introduces new DNA probe sets for studying the evolutionary relationships of crustaceans in the Peracarida group using ultraconserved elements.
Contribution
The paper presents novel, generalized target-capture probe sets for phylogenomics of Peracarida crustaceans.
Findings
In silico analysis recovered up to 5087 loci, with 4633 retained post-filtering.
In vitro analysis extracted up to 4864 unique loci, a tenfold increase over previous methods.
Phylogenetic trees from the data were well-supported and resolved both shallow and deep taxonomic levels.
Abstract
Sequencing via target capture has been used to great effect in phylogenetic studies of organisms such as insects, arachnids and vertebrates. However, other taxa have received limited genomic attention despite their diversity and the intensity of research on such groups. Here, we describe generalised probe sets targeting ultraconserved elements (UCEs) for members of the crustacean orders Amphipoda and Isopoda in the superorder Peracarida. These sets employ ~10,000–100,000 probes targeting up to 10,000 loci. In silico analyses of these probe sets recovered an average of 5087 loci, while an average of 4633 was retained post‐filtering. Phylogenetic analysis of these datasets resulted in well‐supported trees that align with previously reconstructed relationships among the taxa selected while also providing resolution of previously uncertain nodes. Following the in silico analysis, an in…
Genes, proteins, chemicals, diseases, species, mutations and cell lines named across the full text — each resolved to its canonical identifier and authoritative record.
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies · Marine Biology and Ecology Research · Subterranean biodiversity and taxonomy
