Blind scottish centipede unlocks clues to the origins of creepy crawlies

Posted: November 25, 2014 at 3:47 pm

PUBLIC RELEASE DATE:

25-Nov-2014

Contact: PLOS Biology biologypress@plos.org 415-590-3486 PLOS

The arthropods are one of Earth's real success stories, with more species of arthropod than in any other animal phylum, but our knowledge of arthropod genomes has been heavily skewed towards the insects. Recent work has furnished us with the genome sequences of an arachnid and a crustacean, but the myriapods (centipedes and millipedes) have remained the one class of arthropods whose genomes are still in the dark.

An international team of scientists (over 100 from 15 countries) with Stephen Richards (Baylor College of Medicine) as senior author has now sequenced the genome of the centipede Strigamia maritima, enabling them to reconstruct many features of the genetic make-up of the ancestral arthropod that lived more than half a billion years ago. In a report publishing November 25 in the open access journal PLOS Biology, the team reveals our first glimpse of a myriapod genome and uses it to explore the genetic basis of centipede biology and of the incredible diversification of arthropods.

Myriapods probably arose from marine ancestors that invaded the land more than 400 million years ago. They have a large number of near-identical segments, each bearing one or two pairs of legs. Despite their name, centipedes never have a hundred legs (the number of pairs is always odd), though Strigamia itself gets close with 45 to 51 pairs. Although most of us are familiar with centipedes in gardens and woodland, Strigamia lives in coastal habitats, and like most centipedes is a venomous carnivore.

Over a decade ago a team from Cambridge University, headed by Professor Michael Akam, started making the long trip up to Brora on the coast of the Moray Firth in Scotland to lie on their bellies on the beach, digging under the pebbles to hunt out their favorite centipede. Strigamia is favored by scientists for the accessibility of its nests, from which embryos can be gathered for study - making the species an ideal candidate for obtaining the first genome sequence from a myriapod, and opening the door to new understandings of the developmental biology and ecology of these secretive animals.

Ariel Chipman (Hebrew University of Jerusalem) and David Ferrier (University of St. Andrews) are lead co-authors of the report. "This genome of Strigamia has proved to be particularly valuable in deducing the content of important gene families in the ancestral arthropod, this ancestor then being the starting point for the evolution of the huge diversity of arthropods that we currently see today", said David Ferrier.

"There has been a high turn-over in arthropod gene and genome organization, with lots of rearrangements and plenty of gene losses during the evolution of animals like the insects. The sorts of reconstructions that have been made possible by this new myriapod genome provide a foundation for delving more deeply into the biology of these genetic changes to see how they were linked to the diversification of the incredible range of body forms and modes of life that we now find in the arthropods."

One of the most surprising findings is that these centipedes appear to have lost the genes encoding all of the known light receptors used by animals, as well as the genes controlling circadian rhythm - the body's internal clock.

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Blind scottish centipede unlocks clues to the origins of creepy crawlies

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