Caenorhabditis monodelphis, Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter, 2017

Dieter Slos, Walter Sudhaus, Lewis Stevens, Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter, 2017, Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n.: defining the stem morphology and genomics of the genus Caenorhabditis, BMC Zoology 2 (4), pp. 1-15 : 3-10

publication ID

https://doi.org/ 10.1186/s40850-017-0013-2

publication LSID

lsid:zoobank.org:pub:0E6F137B-9975-4A8E-91F2-D588A572076E

DOI

https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.6042436

persistent identifier

https://treatment.plazi.org/id/AA740057-FFD7-C568-FCBA-FBDFFE45FA34

treatment provided by

Plazi

scientific name

Caenorhabditis monodelphis
status

 

Caenorhabditis monodelphis View in CoL 1 sp. n. Slos & Sudhaus

= Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. SB341 [ 7]

= Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. SB341 and Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. n.

SB341 [ 36]

= Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. n. 1 (SB341) and (lapse)

Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. n. 4 (SB341) [ 10]

= Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. 1 SB3 41 [ 6, 8, 37]

= Caenorhabditis View in CoL sp. 4 SB3 41 [ 38]

( Figs. 1 View Fig. 1 , 2 View Fig. 2 , 3 View Fig. 3 and 4 View Fig. 4 ; Table 1)

Adult

Small species (female 0.7 2 - 1.0 4 mm, male 0.6 5 – 0.7 7 mm); cuticle thin, ca. 1 μm wide and finely annulated, 0.8 μm wide at midbody. Lateral field inconspicuous, about 9% of body width, consisting one ridge that can be traced anteriorly to the level of the median bulb and posteriorly at level of rectum in females and about 1½ spicules length anterior of the cloacal aperture in males. Six lips slightly protruding, each with one apical papilliform labial sensillum and a second circle of four sublateral cephalic sensilla in both sexes; amphids opening on the lateral lips, hardly discernible. Buccal tube long and slender, more than twice the width in lip region, pharyngeal sleeve envelopes nearly half of the stoma, the anterior as well as the posterior end of the tube appear slightly thickened, cheilostom inconspicuous, arcade cells forming the gymnostom sometimes visible; glottoid apparatus completely absent. Pharynx with a prominent median bulb, diameter more than 90% of diameter of terminal bulb; terminal bulb pyriform, with double chambered haustrulum, the anterior chamber smallish; cardia conspicuous, opens funnel-like in intestine. Nerve ring encircles isthmus in its anterior part in living specimens, more to the middle of the isthmus in heat relaxed or preserved specimens; deirids usually conspicuous in the lateral field at level of beginning of terminal bulb, sometimes not visible in heat relaxed animals; pore of excretory-secretory system hard to discern posterior of deirid level. Two gland cells ventral and slightly posterior of terminal bulb conspicuous in live specimens. Lateral canals visible in live specimens extending anteriorly to two stoma length from the anterior end and ending at rectum level in the female. Postdeirids usually very conspicuous dorsally of the lateral field at about 7 5% of body length in both sexes and about half the length between vulva and beginning of rectum (or at level of posterior end of uterus remnant) in females, sometimes not visible in heat relaxed specimens.

Female

Maximum body diameter clearly anterior of the vulva, vulva position 65% body length, a transverse slit, bordered in both ends by cuticular longitudinal flaps, vulva lips moderately protruding, four diagonal vulval muscles conspicuous; one pseudocoelomocyte exists anterior of gonad flexure ventrally. Genital tracts asymmetrical; posterior branch rudimentary, sac like, on the left hand side of intestine, without flexure, almost as long as body diameter at the level of the vulva, containing spermatozoa ( Fig. 2 View Fig. 2 ); anterior branch right of intestine, reflexed dorsally close to the pharynx, flexure more than half the length of the gonad (measured from vulva to flexure); at the flexure oocytes in several rows, downstream in one row, oocytes predominantly growing in the last position, where granules are stored inside; sphincter between oviduct and uterus, only a few sperm cells in oviduct, most of them in uterus and blind sac; oviparous, one egg at a time in uterus (rarely two), segmentation starts in the uterus. Rectum a little S-shaped, rectal gland cells very small, posterior anal lip slightly protuberant. Tail short, panagrolaimid, dorsally convex, with offset tip tapering, smooth to somewhat telescope-like by cuticle forming a sleeve-like structure; tail tip with tiny hooks, mostly one dorsal, but also subventral (compare with Poikilolaimus ); opening of phasmids located at 60 – 65% of tail length, shortly anterior of tip, phasmid glands not reaching anus level.

Male

Testis right of intestine, ventrally reflexed in a certain distance posterior of pharynx; flexure relatively short. One pseudocoelomocyte between pharynx and flexure ventrally. Bursa well developed, peloderan, anteriorly open, with smooth margin and sometimes terminally indented, posterior part of velum transversely striated.

Nine pairs of genital papillae (GP) present, two of them anterior of the cloaca, genital papilla 1 (GP1) and GP2 spaced, GP3 to GP6 and GP7 to GP9 clustered, GP5 and GP7 point to the dorsal side of the velum, GP6 slightly bottle shaped, GP8 and GP9 fused at base, GP2 and GP8 not reaching the margin of velum. Phasmids forming small tubercles to the ventral side posterior of the last GP; formula of GPs: v1,v2/(v3,v4,ad,v5) (pd,v6,v7)ph. Precloacal sensillum small, precloacal lip simple (according to type A of W Sudhaus and K Kiontke [ 39]), postcloacal sensilla long filamentous. Spicules short and stout, tawny, separate, slightly curved, with prominent head; shaft with a transverse seam, with a prominent longitudinal ridge, a dorsal lamella, and an oval “ window ”, the tip notched. Gubernaculum dorsally projecting, flexible, in the distal part following the contour of the spicules, spoon shaped in ventral view.

Dauer larva

Unsheathed, mouth closed; stoma long, slender. Pharyngeal sleeve covering about half of the stoma; pharynx with welldeveloped median and terminal bulbs; corpus length ca. 52% of pharynx length. Nerve ring somewhat in the middle between the middle and terminal bulb. Genital primordium at about 60% of body length, elongated oval in shape. Tail conical. Amphids, lateral lines, position excretory pore, deirids and phasmids not observed.

Aberration

In one female a second set of “ sensilla ” were observed a short distance posterior to postdeirids, possibly a duplication of the postdeirids.

Type carrier and locality

Holotype and paratypes of Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n. were isolated from the tunnels of Cis castaneus (Herbst, 1793) ( Ciidae , Coleoptera ) in the bracket fungus Ganoderma applanatum ( Polyporales ) on a stump of the common beech ( Fagus sylvatica) a few centimetres above the ground in Berlin-Grunewald in April 2 0 0 1. The same sample included individuals of Diploscapter sp., Plectus sp., Oscheius dolichura and one individual dorylaimid and mononchid.

Type material

Holotype male (collection number WT 3684) and five female and four male paratypes (WT 3685, WT 3686) are deposited in the National Plant Protection Organization Wageningen, The Netherlands. In addition, four female and four male paratypes, are deposited in the collection of Museum Voor Dierkunde at Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium, five female and three male paratypes in Museum für Naturkunde an der Humboldt-Universität zu Berlin, Berlin, Germany. Additional paratypes are available in the UGent Nematode Collection (slides UGnem158, 159 & 160) of the Nematology Research Unit, Department of Biology, Ghent University, Ghent, Belgium.

Diagnosis and relationship

Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n. can be recognised as a Caenorhabditis based on the thickened GP6 and the clearly visible postdeirids. Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n. is distinguished from all other described Caenorhabditis species by the presence of a monodelphic genital tract in the female with a blind sac posterior the vulva, a panagrolaimid female tail shape, adults with only one ridge on the lateral field, a very long and slender stoma without visible glottoid apparatus and male with short, stout spicule with bifurcate tip.

Ecology and biology

Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n. is a gonochoristic species with both males and females. Females are oviparous and carry only one egg (rarely two eggs). Development from egg to adult took about 5 – 6 days in juice prepared from brown algae at room temperature. Development from dauer larva to adults was completed in less than 3 days at 20 ̊C on NA seeded with OP50. The lifespan of adults is at minimum 1 4 days for males and 1 7 days for females. One pair of adults produced 1 6 7 offspring in 8 days and the daily production of fertile eggs was 6 – 3 1 (mean 1 8; n = 1 4). After the reproductive phase, females lived 9 – 1 4 days (n = 3) with males present.

Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n. has until now only been found in Ganoderma and Fomes in Germany and Belgium in relation with the ciid beetle Cis castaneus. The Ganoderma carrying C. monodelphis sp. n. from Oslo was not investigated for the presence of C. castaneus. In fungal fruiting bodies lacking the beetle C. monodelphis sp. n. was not found. Dauers of C. monodelphis sp. n. were found under the elytra of the beetle, but were not found internally when the beetle was further dissected. These findings indicate a phoretic association with the beetle. As only dauer larvae were isolated from beetles, while adults and larvae were present in the fruiting bodies, we infer that C. monodelphis sp. n. exit from dauer within the mushroom, develop to adulthood and start to reproduce. The food source of the species in natural conditions is not known, but they survive and reproduce easily on E. coli OP50 in culture.

Genome sequence of an inbred strain of Caenorhabditis monodelphis sp. n.

We sequenced the genome of an inbred strain (JU1677) of C. monodelphis sp. n. using Illumina sequencing technology to ~110x coverage. The genome was assembled into 6,864 scaffolds, spanning 115.1 Mb with a scaffold N50 of 49.4 kb ( Table 2). CEGMA (Core Eukaryotic Gene Mapping Approach) [ 40] scores suggested the assembly is of high completeness. We predicted 17,180 protein coding gene models using RNA-Seq evidence. These statistics, and the overall gene content and structure of the assembly were largely in keeping with those determined for other Caenorhabditis species. The genome was larger than that of C. elegans and C. briggsae, which are hermaphroditic species, but smaller than that of C. remanei, a gonochoristic species.

We carried out preliminary comparisons of the structure and content of the C. monodelphis sp. n. genome with those of other sequenced Caenorhabditis species. The number of genes identified was lower than estimates for most other Caenorhabditis species. To compare the gene structures of C. monodelphis sp. n. to that of C. elegans, we identified 6,174 orthologous gene pairs and calculated gene structure statistics ( Table 3, Fig. 5 View Fig. 5 .). To minimize bias from erroneous gene predictions (such as merged or split genes), orthologous gene pairs which differed in CDS length by 20% were considered outliers. C. monodelphis sp. n. genes were typically longer than their orthologues in C. elegans. We also found a clear trend toward more coding exons per gene in C. monodelphis sp. n. than in C. elegans ( Fig. 5a View Fig. 5 ). A few examples of C. monodelphis sp. n. gene models compared to those of orthologues in C. elegans are shown ( Fig. 5b View Fig. 5 ). Although introns are, on average, shorter in C. monodelphis sp. n. than in C. elegans, C. monodelphis genes typically have a longer total span of introns than C. elegans transcripts ( Table 3, Fig. 5 View Fig. 5 .).

C. monodelphis sp. n. is sister to other known Caenorhabditis

We clustered a total of 634,56 4 protein sequences from C. monodelphis sp. n., twenty-two other Caenorhabditis species, and two rhabditomorph outgroup species ( Oscheius tipulae; data courtesy of M. A. Félix, and Heterorhabditis bacteriophora) to define putative orthologues. We identified 34,425 putatively orthologous groups containing at least two members, 303 of which were either single copy or absent across all 25 species. These single copy orthologues were aligned, and the alignments concatenated and used to perform maximum-likelihood and Bayesian inference analysis using RAxML and PhyloBayes, respectively. Both analysis methods resulted in an identical topology, with the placement of C. monodelphis sp. n. arising basally to all other Caenorhabditis species ( Fig. 6 View Fig. 6 ). All branches had maximal support except for three nodes within the Elegans super-group. Our analysis included data from several new and currently undescribed putative species of Caenorhabditis , including C. sp. 21 which is the sister taxon to the Drosophilae plus Elegans super-groups and C. sp. 31 which forms the first branch in the Elegans super-group. C. sp. 38 is placed within the Drosophilae super-group, while C. sp.

26, C. sp. 32 (sister to C. afra) and C. sp. 40 (sister to C. sinica) are all members of the Elegans super-group. From these analyses we conclude that C. monodelphis sp. n. is sister to all other known Caenorhabditis .

Stemspecies pattern reconstruction

Our phylogenetic analyses were based on species with whole genome data available, and thus did not include the full known diversity of the genus. The stemspecies pattern was reconstructed based on ingroup and outgroup comparison. Previous molecular phylogenetic analyses of Caenorhabditis species using a small number of marker genes [ 1 0] placed C. monodelphis sp. n. and C. sonorae [ 4 1] as sister species, again arising at the base of the genus.

The following morphological synapomorphies can be hypothesised to support a C. monodelphis sp. n. – C. sonorae clade: mouth opening triangular ( Fig. 4b View Fig. 4 ), spicule having a complicated tip (notched or dentated) and a longish thin walled “ window ” in the blade ( Figs. 1i View Fig. 1 , 4l View Fig. 4 ), postcloacal sensilla being filiform ( Fig. 4k View Fig. 4 ), and the female tail shortened to less than three times anal body width. Other similarities between both these species are plesiomorphic.

Caenorhabditis and its sister group constitute the monophylum Anarhabditis within the Rhabditina . For convenience, we will call the sister clade of Caenorhabditis Protoscapter ( Fig. 7 View Fig. 7 ): it comprises “ Protorhabditis ”, Prodontorhabditis , Diploscapter and Sclerorhabditis [ 4 2]. To reconstruct the characters of the stemspecies of Caenorhabditis it is necessary to consider the morphologies of all these taxa, and not only the taxa for which we have molecular data. “ Protorhabditis ” is paraphyletic. The Oxyuroides group is sister taxon of Prodontorhabditis [ 4 3, 4 4], and the Xylocola group may be sister taxon of Diploscapter / Sclerorhabditis . However, the two species Protorhabditis elaphri (Hirschmann in Osche, 1952) and P. tristis [ 4 5] appear to represent basal branches in Protoscapter (compare [ 43]). These last two species, despite the paucity of information available for them, are crucial for comparisons that will illuminate the stemspecies patterns of Anarhabditis, Protoscapter and Caenorhabditis .

C. monodelphis sp. n. C. elegans

By ingroup comparison we reconstruct the following characters of the stemspecies of Anarhabditis without differentiating them into apo- or plesiomorphies (on apomorphies see the legend of Fig. 7 View Fig. 7 ):

– adults of small size (less than 1 mm); − lips not offset from anterior end; − four cephalic sensilla present in male and female; − stoma with pharyngeal sleeve (stegostom length nearly that of gymnostom); − median bulb of pharynx strongly developed, corpus intima with transverse ridging, terminal bulb with double haustrulum; − gonochoristic; − female tail elongate conoid; − gonads amphidelphic, the anterior branch right and the posterior left of intestine; − vulva at midbody, a transverse slit; − oviparous, usually only one egg at a time in the uteri; − male gonad on the right side, reflexed to the ventral; − bursa peloderan and anteriorly open, oval-shaped in ventral view, with smooth margin, terminally not notched; − 9 pairs of even genital papillae, two precloacal largely spaced, GP3 – 6 evenly spaced, the last three GPs forming a tight cluster; GP1, GP5 and GP7 terminate on the dorsal surface of the bursa velum; − phasmids open behind GP9, inconspicuous; − bursa formula thus v1,v2/v3,v4,ad,v5 (pd,v6,v7)ph; − male tail tip present; − 1 + 2 circumcloacal sensilla inconspicuous, precloacal lip simple; − spicules separate, stout, head not rounded, behind the shaft a slight ventral projection, dorsal part of blade weakly cuticularised (velum), its tip possibly not even (argued below); − gubernaculum simple spatulate; − dauerlarvae with double cuticle (ensheathed), not waving.

Kingdom

Animalia

Phylum

Nematoda

Class

Chromadorea

Order

Rhabditida

Family

Rhabditidae

Genus

Caenorhabditis

Loc

Caenorhabditis monodelphis

Dieter Slos, Walter Sudhaus, Lewis Stevens, Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
Loc

Caenorhabditis

Dieter Slos & Walter Sudhaus & Lewis Stevens & Wim Bert & Mark Blaxter 2017
2017
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