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Phylogenetic analysis of Zygaenoidea small-subunit rRNA structural variation implies initial oligophagy on cyanogenic host plants in larvae of the moth genus Zygaena (Insecta: Lepidoptera)
Authors:OLIVER NIEHUIS  CLAS M NAUMANN  BERNHARD MISOF
Institution:Alexander Koenig Research Institute and Museum of Zoology, Adenauerallee 160, 53113 Bonn, Germany
Abstract:Cyanogenesis, the release of toxic cyanide from living cells, plays an important role in the defence system of certain plant (e.g. Fabaceae) and animal (e.g. Zygaenidae) taxa. The larvae of a significant number of Zygaena moth species (Zygaenidae) preferentially feed on cyanogenic Fabaceae and some of them are able to sequester cyanogenic compounds of their host plants. Using secondary structure variation of the small-subunit rRNA, we tested the currently accepted evolutionary hypothesis explaining species diversification in the genus Zygaena . We derived secondary structures considering evidence from covariation patterns and thermodynamic folding and applied structural information in a phylogenetic analysis. Contrary to previous assumptions, our results suggest that the use of cyanogenic larval host plants is an ancient trait and that the ability to feed on cyanogenic plants was probably already present in the most recent common ancestor of Zygaena . The utilization of acyanogenic plants in Zygaena species appears to be the result of a single secondary, reverse, larval host-plant shift. © 2006 The Linnean Society of London, Zoological Journal of the Linnean Society , 2006, 147 , 367–381.
Keywords:18S rRNA  burnet moths  comparative sequence analysis  cyanogenic glucosides  phylogeny  Zygaenidae
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