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Featured researches published by O. S. Kedrova.


Journal of Molecular Evolution | 1998

PHYLOGENY OF NEMATODA AND CEPHALORHYNCHA DERIVED FROM 18S RDNA

Vladimir V. Aleshin; Irina A. Milyutina; O. S. Kedrova; N. S. Vladychenskaya; N. B. Petrov

Abstract. Phylogenetic relationships of nematodes, nematomorphs, kinorhynchs, priapulids, and some other major groups of invertebrates were studied by 18S rRNA gene sequencing. Kinorhynchs and priapulids form the monophyletic Cephalorhyncha clade that is the closest to the coelomate animals. When phylogenetic trees were generated by different methods, the position of nematomorphs appeared to be unstable. Inclusion of Enoplus brevis, a representative of a slowly evolving nematode lineage, in the set of analyzed species refutes the tree patterns, previously derived from molecular data, where the nematodes appear as a basal bilateral lineage. The nematodes seem to be closer to the coelomate animals than was speculated earlier. According to the results obtained, nematodes, nematomorphs, tardigrades, arthropods, and cephalorhynchs are a paraphyletic association of closely related taxa.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2004

Analysis of 18S rRNA gene sequences suggests significant molecular differences between Macrodasyida and Chaetonotida (Gastrotricha).

Oleg G. Manylov; N. S. Vladychenskaya; Irina A. Milyutina; O. S. Kedrova; Nikolai P. Korokhov; Gennady A. Dvoryanchikov; Vladimir V. Aleshin; N. B. Petrov

Partial 18S rRNA gene sequences of four macrodasyid and one chaetonotid gastrotrichs were obtained and compared with the available sequences of other gastrotrich species and representatives of various metazoan phyla. Contrary to the earlier molecular data, the gastrotrich sequences did not comprise a monophyletic group but formed two distinct clades, corresponding to the Macrodasyida and Chaetonotida, with the basal position occupied by the sequences of Tetranchyroderma sp. and Xenotrichula sp., respectively. Depending on the taxon sampling and methods of analysis, the two clades were separated by various combinations of clades Rotifera, Gnathostomulida, and Platyhelminthes, and never formed a clade with Nematoda. Thus, monophyly of the Gastrotricha is not confirmed by analysis of the presently available molecular data.


FEBS Letters | 1998

Secondary structure of some elements of 18S rRNA suggests that strongylid and a part of rhabditid nematodes are monophyletic

Vladimir V. Aleshin; O. S. Kedrova; Irina A. Milyutina; N. S. Vladychenskaya; N. B. Petrov

Analysis of the secondary structure of 18S rRNA molecules in nematodes revealed some new traits in the secondary structure peculiar to their hairpin 17. Some of them are characteristic of all the nematodes, whereas others are characteristic exclusively of the order Rhabditida. The loss of a nucleotide pair in the highly conservative region of hairpin 17 distinguishes 18S rRNA of the Strongylida and some species of the Rhabditida from other nematodes and, moreover, from all other organisms. Hence, it is possible to regard the Strongylida and a part of the Rhabditida including Caenorhabditis elegans as a new monophyletic taxon.


Molecular Biology | 2009

On the phylogenetic position of insects in the Pancrustacea clade

Vladimir V. Aleshin; Kirill V. Mikhailov; A. V. Konstantinova; Mikhail A. Nikitin; L. Yu. Rusin; D. A. Buinova; O. S. Kedrova; N. B. Petrov

The current views on the phylogeny of arthropods are at odds with the traditional system, which recognizes four independent arthropod classes: Chelicerata, Crustacea, Myriapoda, and Insecta. There is compelling evidence that insects comprise a monophyletic lineage with Crustacea within a larger clade named Pancrustacea, or Tetraconata. However, which crustacean group is the closest living relative of insects is still an open question. In recent phylogenetic trees constructed on the basis of large gene sequence data insects are placed together with primitive crustaceans, the Branchiopoda. This topology is often suspected to be a result of the long branch attraction artifact. We analyzed concatenated data on 77 ribosomal proteins, elongation factor 1A (EF1A), initiation factor 5A (eIF5A), and several other nuclear and mitochondrial proteins. Analyses of nuclear genes confirm the monophyly of Hexapoda, the clade uniting entognath and ectognath insects. The hypothesis of the monophyly of Hexapoda and Branchiopoda is supported in the majority of analyses. The Maxillopoda, another clade of Entomostraca, occupies a sister position to the Hexapoda + Branchiopoda group. Higher crustaceans, the Malacostraca, in most analyses appear a more basal lineage within the Pancrustacea. We report molecular synapomorphies in low homoplastic regions, which support the clade Hexapoda + Branchiopoda + Maxillopoda and the monophyletic Malacostraca including Phyllocarida. Thus, the common origin of Hexapoda and Branchiopoda and their position within Entomostraca are suggested to represent bona fide phylogenetic relationships rather than computational artifacts.


Molecular Biology | 2001

Trefusiidae Are a Subtaxon of Marine Enoplida (Nematoda): Evidence from Primary Structure of Hairpin 35 and 48 Loops of SSU rRNA Gene

L. Yu. Rusin; Vladimir V. Aleshin; N. S. Vladychenskaya; Irina A. Milyutina; O. S. Kedrova; N. B. Petrov

A rare nucleotide substitution was found in the evolutionarily conserved loop of hairpin 35 of the 18S rRNA gene of marine free-living nematode, Trefusia zostericola(Nematoda: Enoplida). The same substitution was found in all the marine Enoplida studied but not in other nematodes. Such a molecular synapomorphy indicates that marine enoplids are more closely related to T. zostericolathan to freshwater Triplonchida. Maximum parsimony, neighbor-joining, and maximum likelihood analyses of complete nucleotide sequences of the gene, with the heterogeneity of nucleotide sites in evolution rates taken into account, support this conclusion. Hence, the hypothesis of particular primitiveness of Trefusiidae among nematodes should be rejected. Phylogenies based on molecular data support the morphological reduction of metanemes in Trefusiidae. Alongside with the unique change in hairpin 35 loop among marine Enoplida (including T. zostericola), hairpin 48 is also modified by a rare transversion which could be found among Mesorhabditoidea nematodes, in related genera Pelodera, Mesorhabditis, Teratorhabditis, Parasitorhabditis, Crustorhabditis, and Distolabrellus, and in 11 orders of Rhodophyta. Rare mutations in hairpins 35 and 48 tend to be fixed correlatively in evolution and could be found in all the Acanthocephala species. X-Ray data show that these regions (H31 and H43, in alternative nomenclature) are spatially brought together in native ribosomes. The nature and distribution of molecular autoapomorphies in phylogenetic trees of high-rank taxa are discussed.


PLOS ONE | 2016

Mitochondrial Genomes of Kinorhyncha: trnM Duplication and New Gene Orders within Animals

Olga V. Popova; Kirill V. Mikhailov; Mikhail A. Nikitin; Maria D. Logacheva; Aleksey A. Penin; Maria S. Muntyan; O. S. Kedrova; N. B. Petrov; Yuri V. Panchin; Vladimir V. Aleoshin

Many features of mitochondrial genomes of animals, such as patterns of gene arrangement, nucleotide content and substitution rate variation are extensively used in evolutionary and phylogenetic studies. Nearly 6,000 mitochondrial genomes of animals have already been sequenced, covering the majority of animal phyla. One of the groups that escaped mitogenome sequencing is phylum Kinorhyncha—an isolated taxon of microscopic worm-like ecdysozoans. The kinorhynchs are thought to be one of the early-branching lineages of Ecdysozoa, and their mitochondrial genomes may be important for resolving evolutionary relations between major animal taxa. Here we present the results of sequencing and analysis of mitochondrial genomes from two members of Kinorhyncha, Echinoderes svetlanae (Cyclorhagida) and Pycnophyes kielensis (Allomalorhagida). Their mitochondrial genomes are circular molecules approximately 15 Kbp in size. The kinorhynch mitochondrial gene sequences are highly divergent, which precludes accurate phylogenetic inference. The mitogenomes of both species encode a typical metazoan complement of 37 genes, which are all positioned on the major strand, but the gene order is distinct and unique among Ecdysozoa or animals as a whole. We predict four types of start codons for protein-coding genes in E. svetlanae and five in P. kielensis with a consensus DTD in single letter code. The mitochondrial genomes of E. svetlanae and P. kielensis encode duplicated methionine tRNA genes that display compensatory nucleotide substitutions. Two distant species of Kinorhyncha demonstrate similar patterns of gene arrangements in their mitogenomes. Both genomes have duplicated methionine tRNA genes; the duplication predates the divergence of two species. The kinorhynchs share a few features pertaining to gene order that align them with Priapulida. Gene order analysis reveals that gene arrangement specific of Priapulida may be ancestral for Scalidophora, Ecdysozoa, and even Protostomia.


Molecular Biology | 2015

Repetitive DNA sequences as an indicator of the level of genetic isolation in fish

E. A. Shubina; E. V. Ponomareva; A. V. Klimov; A. V. Klimova; O. S. Kedrova

Although the functional role is still unknown for most types of nuclear noncoding repetitive sequences, some of them proved to provide adequate phylogenetic and taxonomic markers for studying the genetic relationships of organisms at the species and within-species levels. Several markers were used in this work. First, microsatellite markers were used to examine populations varying in the extent of genetic subdivision in marine and anadromous fish, including the Chilean jack mackerel Trachurus murphyi, anadromous brown trout Salmo trutta, and isolated and anadromous char populations. Locus polymorphism was proportional to the gene flow between populations in all cases. Second, satellite DNA was used to study the phylogenetic relationships within the genera Salmo, Oncorhynchus, Salvelinus, and Coregonus. Genetic distances agreed well with the taxonomic relationships based on morphological traits and various biochemical markers and correlated with the evolutionary ages estimated for the groups by other markers. Third, RAPD PCR with a set of 20-mer primers was performed to study the genus Coregonus and anadromous and isolated populations and species of the genus Salvelinus. The resulting phylogenetic trees may help to resolve some disputable taxonomic issues for the groups. A comparison showed that several RAPD-detected sequences contain conserved fragments of coding sequences and polymorphic repeats (minisatellites) from intergenic regions or introns. The finding point to a nonrandom nature of repetitive DNA divergence and may reflect the evolution of the fish groups examined. Heterochromatic satellite repeats were assumed to contribute to generating a reproductive barrier.


Gene | 2001

The unusually long small subunit ribosomal RNA gene found in amitochondriate amoeboflagellate Pelomyxa palustris: its rRNA predicted secondary structure and phylogenetic implication

Irina A. Milyutina; Vladimir V. Aleshin; Kirill A. Mikrjukov; O. S. Kedrova; N. B. Petrov


Molecular Biology | 1999

[Secondary structure of hairpin 17 of the lower multicellular animal Rhopalura ophiocomae (Mesozoa: Orthonectida) as an example of "punctuated equilibrium" in the evolution of 18S ribosomal RNA].

Vladimir V. Aleshin; Vladychenskaia Ns; O. S. Kedrova; Miliutina Ia; N. B. Petrov


Molecular Biology | 1995

Comparison of 18S ribosomal RNA genes in invertebrate phylogeny

Vladimir V. Aleshin; Vladychenskaia Ns; O. S. Kedrova; Miliutina Ia; N. B. Petrov

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N. B. Petrov

Moscow State University

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L. Yu. Rusin

Moscow State University

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Oleg G. Manylov

Saint Petersburg State University

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