Xenoturbella is a genus of very simple bilaterians up to a few centimeters long. It contains a small number of marine benthic worm-like species.[3]
Xenoturbella | |
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Xenoturbella japonica. The white arrowhead indicates the ring furrow. | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Eukaryota |
Kingdom: | Animalia |
Phylum: | Xenacoelomorpha |
Subphylum: | Xenoturbellida Bourlat et al., 2006 |
Family: | Xenoturbellidae Westblad, 1949 |
Genus: | Xenoturbella Westblad, 1949[1][2] |
Species | |
See text |
The first known species (Xenoturbella bocki) was collected in 1878 and 1879 in the Gullmar fiord on the Swedish west coast by August Malm and is stored in the collection of the Gothenburg Natural History Museum.[4] A specimen is on display in the exhibition. It was collected again in the Gullmar fiord in 1915 by Sixten Bock, but it was only properly described in 1949 by Einar Westblad.[5] The type specimens are kept at the Swedish national museum of natural history in Stockholm.
Description
editXenoturbella has a very simple body plan. It consists of a dorsoventrally flattened acoelomate body, with a ventral furrow on each side running down from the anterior tip till they are stopped by an anterior circumferential furrow.[6][7] It shows two ciliated epithelial layers: an external epidermis and an internal gastrodermis lining the simple sac-like gut. The epidermis and gastrodermis is separated by a thick and multilayered basement membrane called the "subepidermal membrane complex", a major part of the extracellular matrix.[8][9] The multiciliated epidermis displays unique interconnected ciliary rootlets and mode of withdrawal and resorption of worn epidermal cells.[6] The mouth is a mid-ventral pore leading to a gastral cavity, and there is no anus:[10][6] waste is dispelled through the same opening as food is taken in.[11]
The nervous system is composed by a net of interconnected neurons beneath the epidermis, without any concentration of neurons forming ganglia or nerve cords.[12][13]
Species of Xenoturbella also lack a respiratory, circulatory and excretory system. In fact, there are no defined organs, except for an anterior statocyst containing flagellated cells and a frontal pore organ.[10][6] There are no organized gonads, but gametes are produced. Adults producing sperm are very rarely observed, but eggs and embryos are known to occur in follicles.[14]
Research on the species Xenoturbella bocki has shown it to have external fertilization, with eggs and sperm being released from new openings in the body wall. Gametes released into the water through ruptures also occurs in Xenoturbella's closest relatives the acoels and nemertodermatids. No examples of hermaphroditism was reported.[15][16]
Eggs of Xenoturbella are 0.2 millimetres (0.0079 in) wide, pale orange and opaque.[17] Newly hatched embryos are free-swimming (tending to stay close to water surface) and ciliated. They feature no mouth and they do not apparently feed.[17] They are similar to the juveniles of acoelomate Neochildia fusca.[17]
Systematics
editEtymology
editThe term Xenoturbella derives from the Ancient Greek word ξένος (xénos), meaning "strange, unusual",[18][19] and from the Latin word turbella meaning "stir, bustle".[20] This refers to the enigmatic, unusual taxonomic status of the animal, initially considered as related to turbellarians, a group of flatworms whose aquatic species stir microscopic particles close to their ciliated epidermis.[21]
Taxonomy
editCurrently the genus Xenoturbella contains six recognized species:[22]
- Xenoturbella bocki Westblad, 1949[23] [Xenoturbella westbladi Israelsson, 1999[24][25]]
- Xenoturbella churro Rouse, Wilson, Carvajal & Vrijenhoek, 2016[3][26]
- Xenoturbella hollandorum Rouse, Wilson, Carvajal & Vrijenhoek, 2016
- Xenoturbella japonica Nakano, 2017[27][28]
- Xenoturbella monstrosa Rouse, Wilson, Carvajal & Vrijenhoek, 2016
- Xenoturbella profunda Rouse, Wilson, Carvajal & Vrijenhoek, 2016
Phylogeny
editAmong species
editTo date, the genus Xenoturbella is composed of six species distributed into a shallow-water clade—three species up to 400–650 metres (1,310–2,130 ft)—and a deep-water clade—three species deeper than 1,700 metres (5,600 ft).
The two smaller species, X. bocki and X. hollandorum, which are up to 4 centimetres (1.6 in) long, are found in shallower waters less than 650 metres (2,130 ft) deep. They form a clade together with a third species, X. japonica, which is slightly over 5 centimetres (2.0 in) long and was found in waters less than 560 metres (1,840 ft) deep.[27] Three larger species, X. monstrosa, X. churro, and X. profunda, which were 10 centimetres (3.9 in) or greater long and lived in deeper waters 1,700–3,700 metres (5,600–12,100 ft), form another clade.[3]
Species-level cladogram of the genus Xenoturbella. | |||||||||||||||
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The cladogram has been reconstructed from mitochondrial DNA and protein sequences.[3][27] |
Among animals
editThe systematic and phylogenetic position of Xenoturbella among animals has been considered enigmatic since its discovery. An early DNA analysis suggested a close relationship to molluscs,[29] but it was probably a result from contamination with DNA of molluscs that Xenoturbella consumes.[30]
A subsequent study suggested a placement of the genus in its own phylum, Xenoturbellida, as a deuterostome clade and sister group to the Ambulacraria.[31] The deuterostome affiliations were then recovered by studies that indicate a basal position of this phylum within the deuterostomes[32][33] or in a sister group relationship with the Ambulacraria.[34]
However, morphological characters, such as the structure of epidermal cilia, suggested a close relationship with Acoelomorpha, another problematic group.[35] The study of the embryonic stages of Xenoturbella also showed that it is a direct developer without a feeding larval stage, and this developmental mode is similar to that of acoelomorphs.[17] Molecular studies based on the concatenation of hundreds of proteins revealed indeed a monophyletic group composed by Xenoturbella and Acoelomorpha.[36][34][37] This clade was named Xenacoelomorpha.[34]
The monophyly of Xenacoelomorpha soon became established, but its position as either a basal bilaterian clade or a deuterostome remained unresolved until 2016 when two new studies, with increased gene and taxon sampling, again placed Xenoturbella as the sister group of Acoelomorpha within Xenacoelomorpha, and placed Xenacoelomorpha as sister to Nephrozoa (Protostomia plus Deuterostomia), and therefore the basalmost bilaterian phylum.[3][38]
References
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- ^ Tyler, S.; Schilling, S.; Hooge, M.; Bush, L.F. (2006–2016). "Xenoturbella". Turbellarian taxonomic database. Version 1.7. Retrieved 2016-02-03.
- ^ a b c d e Rouse, Greg W.; Wilson, Nerida G.; Carvajal, Jose I.; Vrijenhoek, Robert C. (2016-02-03). "New deep-sea species of Xenoturbella and the position of Xenacoelomorpha". Nature. 530 (7588): 94–97. Bibcode:2016Natur.530...94R. doi:10.1038/nature16545. PMID 26842060. S2CID 3870574.
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- ^ a b c d Giribet, Gonzalo; Edgecombe, Gregory D. (2020-03-03). The Invertebrate Tree of Life. Princeton University Press. pp. 88–89. ISBN 978-0-691-17025-1.
- ^ What is Xenoturbella? | Zoological Letters - BioMed Central
- ^ The Invertebrate Tree of Life
- ^ Molecular approaches for studying the evolution of the Xenacoelomorpha
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- ^ Israelsson, Olle; Budd, Graham E. (2005). "Eggs and embryos in Xenoturbella (phylum uncertain) are not ingested prey". Development Genes and Evolution. 215 (7): 358–363. doi:10.1007/s00427-005-0485-x. ISSN 0949-944X. PMID 15818482. S2CID 9078623.
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- ^ WoRMS: Xenoturbella Westblad, 1949
- ^ WoRMS: Xenoturbella bocki (Westblad, 1949)
- ^ AphiaID: 879660 has been DELETED - reason: Database artifact, incorrect authority - WoRMS
- ^ Xenoturbella westbladi Israelsson, 1999 - WoRMS
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- ^ a b c Nakano, Hiroaki; Miyazawa, Hideyuki; Maeno, Akiteru; Shiroishi, Toshihiko; Kakui, Keiichi; Koyanagi, Ryo; Kanda, Miyuki; Satoh, Noriyuki; Omori, Akihito; Kohtsuka, Hisanori (2017). "A new species of Xenoturbella from the western Pacific Ocean and the evolution of Xenoturbella". BMC Evolutionary Biology. 17 (1): 245. doi:10.1186/s12862-017-1080-2. PMC 5733810. PMID 29249199.
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- ^ Telford, M. J. (2008). "Xenoturbellida: the fourth deuterostome phylum and the diet of worms". Genesis. 46 (11): 580–586. doi:10.1002/dvg.20414. PMID 18821586. S2CID 5379221.
- ^ a b c Philippe, H.; Brinkmann, H.; Copley, R. R.; Moroz, L. L.; Nakano, H.; Poustka, A. J.; Wallberg, A.; Peterson, K. J.; Telford, M. J. (2011). "Acoelomorph flatworms are deuterostomes related to Xenoturbella". Nature. 470 (7333): 255–258. Bibcode:2011Natur.470..255P. doi:10.1038/nature09676. PMC 4025995. PMID 21307940.
- ^ Lundin, K (1998). "The epidermal ciliary rootlets of Xenoturbella bocki (Xenoturbellida) revisited: new support for a possible kinship with the Acoelomorpha (Platyhelminthes)". Zoologica Scripta. 27 (3): 263–270. doi:10.1111/j.1463-6409.1998.tb00440.x. S2CID 85324766.
- ^ Hejnol, A., Obst, M., Stamatakis, A., Ott, M., Rouse, G. W., Edgecombe, G. D., et al. (2009). Assessing the root of bilaterian animals with scalable phylogenomic methods. Proceedings of the Royal Society, Series B, 276, 4261–4270.
- ^ Edgecombe, G. D.; Giribet, G.; Dunn, C. W.; Hejnol, A.; Kristensen, R. M.; Neves, R. C.; Rouse, G. W.; Worsaae, K.; Sørensen, M. V. (2011). "Higher-level metazoan relationships: Recent progress and remaining questions". Organisms Diversity & Evolution. 11 (2): 151–172. doi:10.1007/s13127-011-0044-4. S2CID 32169826.
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Further reading
edit- G. Haszprunar, R.M. Rieger, P. Schuchert (1991). "Extant 'Problematica' within or near the Metazoa." In: Simonetta, A.M. & Conway Morris, S. (eds.): The Early Evolution of Metazoa and the Significance of Problematic Taxa. Oxford Univ. Press, Cambridge. pp. 99–105
- K. U. Kjeldsen; M. Obst; H. Nakano; P. Funch; A. Schramm (2010). "Two Types of Endosymbiotic Bacteria in the Enigmatic Marine Worm Xenoturbella bocki". Applied and Environmental Microbiology. 76 (8): 2657–2662. Bibcode:2010ApEnM..76.2657K. doi:10.1128/aem.01092-09. PMC 2849209. PMID 20139320.