RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 A taxogenomics approach uncovers a new genus in the phylum Placozoa JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 202119 DO 10.1101/202119 A1 Michael Eitel A1 Warren R. Francis A1 Hans-Jürgen Osigus A1 Stefan Krebs A1 Sergio Vargas A1 Helmut Blum A1 Gray A. Williams A1 Bernd Schierwater A1 Gert Wörheide YR 2017 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2017/10/13/202119.abstract AB The Placozoa [1] is a monotypic phylum of non-bilaterian marine animals. Its only species, Trichoplax adhaerens, was described in 1883 [2], Despite the worldwide distribution of placozoans [3–6], morphological differences are lacking among isolates from different geographic areas and, consequently, no other species in this phylum has been described and accepted for more than 130 years. However, recent single-gene studies on the genetic diversity of this “species” have revealed deeply divergent lineages of, as yet, undefined taxonomic ranks [3,5,6], Since single genes are not considered sufficient to define species [7], a whole nuclear genome comparison appears the most appropriate approach to determine relationships between placozoan lineages. Such a “taxogenomics” approach can help discover and diagnose potential additional species and, therefore, develop a much-needed, more robust, taxonomic framework for this phylum. To achieve this we sequenced the genome of a placozoan lineage isolated from Hong Kong (lineage H13), which is distantly related to T. adhaerens [6]. The 87 megabase genome assembly contains 12,010 genes. Comparison to the T. adhaerens genome [8] identified an average protein distance of 24.4% in more than 2,700 screened one-to-one orthologs, similar to levels observed between the chordate classes mammals and birds. Genome rearrangements are commonplace and >25% of genes are not collinear (i.e. they are not in the same order in the two genomes). Finally, a multi-gene distance comparison with other non-bilaterian phyla indicate genus level differences to T. adhaerens. These data highlight the large genomic diversity within the Placozoa and justifies the designation of lineage HI3 as a new species, Xxxxxxxxx yyyyyyyyyyyyy1 gen. et spaec. nov., now the second described placozoan species and the first in a new genus. Phylogenomic analyses furthermore supports a robust placement of the Placozoa as sister to a cnidarian-bilaterian clade.