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. 1999 Mar 15;99(1):69-76.
doi: 10.1016/s0166-6851(98)00184-4.

Phylogenetic position of the kinetoplastids, Cryptobia bullocki, Cryptobia catostomi, and Cryptobia salmositica and monophyly of the genus Trypanosoma inferred from small subunit ribosomal RNA sequences

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Phylogenetic position of the kinetoplastids, Cryptobia bullocki, Cryptobia catostomi, and Cryptobia salmositica and monophyly of the genus Trypanosoma inferred from small subunit ribosomal RNA sequences

A D Wright et al. Mol Biochem Parasitol. .

Abstract

Phylogenetic relationships within the kinetoplastid flagellates were inferred from comparisons of small-subunit ribosomal RNA gene sequences. These included three new gene sequences from Cryptobia bullocki, (2091 bp), Cryptobia catostomi (2090 bp), and Cryptobia salmositica (2091 bp). Trees produced using maximum parsimony and distance-matrix methods (least squares and neighbor-joining) demonstrated with strong bootstrap support, that the kinetoplastids are a monophyletic group divided into two major lineages consistent with the two suborders, Trypanosomatina and Bodonina. Within the trypanosomatid clade, the genus Trypanosoma is a monophyletic group that divides into two groups, the salivarian trypanosomes and the stercorarian trypanosomes. Dimastigella and Rhynchobodo, currently classified in the Bodonina, are basal to the trypanosomatid-bodonid clade, suggesting that the suborder Bodonina is paraphyletic. Further, Trypanoplasma borreli grouped within the Cryptobia clade, and was more closely related to C. salmositica than to either C. bullocki or C. catostomi. This new molecular evidence, coupled with morphological similarities of the two genera, again calls into question the validity of the genus Trypanoplasma.

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