Freshwater sponges include six extant families which belong to the suborder Spongillina (Porifera). The taxonomy of freshwater
sponges is problematic and their phylogeny and evolution are not well understood. Sequences of the ribosomal internal transcribed
spacers (ITS1 and ITS2) of 11 species from the family Lubomirskiidae, 13 species from the family Spongillidae, and 1 species
from the family Potamolepidae were obtained to study the phylogenetic relationships between endemic and cosmopolitan freshwater
sponges and the evolution of sponges in Lake Baikal. The present study is the first one where ITS1 sequences were successfully
aligned using verified secondary structure models and, in combination with ITS2, used to infer relationships between the freshwater
sponges. Phylogenetic trees inferred using maximum likelihood, neighbor-joining, and parsimony methods and Bayesian inference
revealed that the endemic family Lubomirskiidae was monophyletic. Our results do not support the monophyly of Spongillidae
because Lubomirskiidae formed a robust clade with
E. muelleri, and
Trochospongilla latouchiana formed a robust clade with the outgroup
Echinospongilla brichardi (Potamolepidae). Within the cosmopolitan family Spongillidae the genera
Radiospongilla and
Eunapius were found to be monophyletic, while
Ephydatia
muelleri was basal to the family Lubomirskiidae. The genetic distances between Lubomirskiidae species being much lower than those
between Spongillidae species are indicative of their relatively recent radiation from a common ancestor. These results indicated
that rDNA spacers sequences can be useful in the study of phylogenetic relationships of and the identification of species
of freshwater sponges.
Keywords ITS1 - ITS2 - Secondary structure - Phylogeny - Molecular taxonomy - Porifera - Spongillina