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1.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 145: 106727, 2020 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31899222

RESUMO

Trichophoreae is a nearly cosmopolitan Cyperaceae tribe that contains ~17 species displaying striking variation in size, inflorescence complexity, and perianth morphology. Although morphologically distinct, the status of its three genera (Cypringlea, Oreobolopsis and Trichophorum) is controversial because recent phylogenetic studies have suggested they might not be reciprocally monophyletic. However, previous analyses have shown conflicting topologies and consistently poor support due to an initial rapid diversification of the tribe. We analysed restriction-site associated DNA sequencing (RADseq) data from nearly all species of the clade, combined with five Sanger-based markers (matK, ndhF, rps16, ETS-1f, ITS) sampled extensively within species. This approach allowed us to resolve deep and shallow relationships within Trichophoreae for the first time, despite an anomaly zone spanning several successive short branches that produced considerable gene tree incongruence. Analyses reveal a primary phylogenetic split of the tribe into two clades roughly corresponding to an East Asian-North American disjunction that dates back to the mid-Miocene, with both clades comprised of a mixture of reduced unispicate and larger taxa with highly compound inflorescences. Morphological characters traditionally used in the circumscription of Trichophoreae genera are shown to be homoplasious. Several of these characters correlate best with climatic conditions, with the most reduced species occurring in open habitats at high latitudes and altitudes. Close relatives with highly compound inflorescences are found in temperate or subtropical forest understories. Cypringlea and Oreobolopsis are deeply nested within Trichophorum, and we merge all three genera into a more broadly circumscribed Trichophorum. We also show that Scirpus filipes is another previously unrecognized East Asian species of Trichophorum with highly compound inflorescences.


Assuntos
Cyperaceae/classificação , Teorema de Bayes , Biodiversidade , Cyperaceae/anatomia & histologia , Cyperaceae/genética , DNA de Plantas/química , DNA de Plantas/metabolismo , DNA Ribossômico/química , DNA Ribossômico/metabolismo , Funções Verossimilhança , Filogenia , Filogeografia , Plastídeos/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA
2.
Syst Biol ; 67(1): 94-112, 2018 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28472459

RESUMO

Despite the promise that molecular data would provide a seemingly unlimited source of independent characters, many plant phylogenetic studies are still based on only two regions, the plastid genome and nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrDNA). Their popularity can be explained by high-copy numbers and universal polymerase chain reaction (PCR) primers that make their sequences easily amplified and converted into parallel datasets. Unfortunately, their utility is limited by linked loci and limited characters resulting in low confidence in the accuracy of phylogenetic estimates, especially when rapid radiations occur. In another contribution on anchored phylogenomics in angiosperms, we presented flowering plant-specific anchored enrichment probes for hundreds of conserved nuclear genes and demonstrated their use at the level of all angiosperms. In this contribution, we focus on a common problem in phylogenetic reconstructions below the family level: Weak or unresolved backbone due to rapid radiations ($\leqslant $10 million years) followed by long divergence, using the Cariceae-Dulichieae-Scirpeae (CDS, Cyperaceae) clade as a test case. By comparing our nuclear matrix of 461 genes to a typical Sanger-sequence dataset consisting of a few plastid genes (matK, ndhF) and an nrDNA marker (ETS), we demonstrate that our nuclear data is fully compatible with the Sanger dataset and resolves short backbone internodes with high support in both concatenated and coalescence-based analyses. In addition, we show that nuclear gene tree incongruence is inversely proportional to phylogenetic information content, indicating that incongruence is mostly due to gene tree estimation error. This suggests that large numbers of conserved nuclear loci could produce more accurate trees than sampling rapidly evolving regions prone to saturation and long-branch attraction. The robust phylogenetic estimates obtained here, and high congruence with previous morphological and molecular analyses, are strong evidence for a complete tribal revision of CDS clade. The anchored hybrid enrichment probes used in this study should be similarly effective in other flowering plant groups.


Assuntos
Classificação/métodos , Especiação Genética , Magnoliopsida/classificação , Magnoliopsida/genética , Filogenia , Genoma de Planta , Reprodutibilidade dos Testes
3.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 119: 93-104, 2018 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29113924

RESUMO

For over a century, the origins and mechanisms underlying the diversification of the enormous temperate genus Carex (>2100 species; Cariceae, Cyperaceae) have remained largely speculative. Characteristics such as its diverse ecology, varied biogeography, and intriguing cytology have made Carex a powerful model for studying plant evolution, but its uncertain sister-group relationships hinder its use in studies that depend on accurate ancestral state estimates and biogeographic inferences. To identify the sister to Carex, we estimated the phylogeny of all genera in the Cariceae-Dulichieae-Scirpeae clade (CDS) using three plastid and two nuclear ribosomal markers. Ancestral state reconstructions of key characters were made, and a time-calibrated tree estimated. Carex is strongly supported as sister to the rare East Asian Sumatroscirpus, sole genus of a new tribe, Sumatroscirpeae trib. nov. Believed to be unique to Carex, the perigynium (prophyllar bract enclosing a flower) is in fact a synapomorphy shared with this small tribe (∼4 species) that appeared 36 Mya. We thus suggest the initial key innovation in the remarkable diversification of Carex is not the perigynium, but could be the release of mechanical constraints on perigynia through spikelet truncation, resulting in novel adaptive morphologies. Monoecy, chromosomal change, and rapid inflorescence development enabling phenological isolation may also be involved. The tiny tribe Sumatroscirpeae will provide unprecedented insights into the inflorescence homology, evolution, diversification, and biogeographic history of its sister-group Carex, one of the world's most diverse plant lineages.


Assuntos
Carex (Planta)/classificação , Filogenia , Carex (Planta)/anatomia & histologia , Fósseis , Funções Verossimilhança
4.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 88: 105-20, 2015 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25858558

RESUMO

Traditional Cariceae and Carex (1966 spp.) classifications recognised five genera (Carex, Cymophyllus, Kobresia, Schoenoxiphium, Uncinia) and four subgenera (Carex, Vignea, Vigneastra, Psyllophora). However, molecular studies have shown that only Carex, divided into five major lineages (the Core Carex, Schoenoxiphium, Core Unispicate, Vignea and Siderostictae Clades), is natural. These studies have also suggested that many early diverging tribal lineages are East Asian in origin, but the sampling of East Asian groups has been poor, and support for relationships within and among major Cariceae clades has been weak. To test deep patterns of relationship in Carex we assembled the longest sequence dataset yet (ITS, ETS 1f, matK, ndhF, rps16; ca. 4400bp) with taxonomic sampling focused on critical East and Southeast Asian Carex sections that have blurred subgeneric limits (Decorae, Graciles, Mundae) or have been at the heart of theories on tribal origins (Hemiscaposae, Indicae, Surculosae, Euprepes, Mapaniifoliae, Hypolytroides). Results indicate that subg. Vigneastra is highly polyphyletic (in five of seven major lineages recognised), and they provide the strongest support yet seen for all previously recognised major Cariceae clades in a single analysis (⩾93% BS). Moreover, results provide strong evidence for three previously unrecognised early diverging East and Southeast Asian lineages: a "Hypolytroides Clade" (sect. Hypolytroides) sister to the Siderostictae Clade, and for a "Dissitiflora Lineage" (sect. Mundae) and a morphologically diverse "Small Core Carex Clade" (sects. Graciles, Decorae, Mapaniifoliae, Euprepes, Indicae) as successive sisters to approximately 1400 species in the Core Carex Clade. Our findings also suggest that morphological diversification may have occurred in clades dominated by Asian species followed by canalization to a narrower range of morphologies in species-rich, cosmopolitan lineages.


Assuntos
Carex (Planta)/classificação , Filogenia , Sudeste Asiático , Evolução Biológica , Carex (Planta)/genética , Ásia Oriental , Filogeografia
5.
Biochemistry ; 52(21): 3773-80, 2013 May 28.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23641666

RESUMO

A series of N-substituted glycine oligomers (peptoids) of varying length and side chains was synthesized with the aim of producing peptidomimetics that would bind with high affinity to heparin and thereby neutralize its anticoagulant activity. To this end, a library of 29 peptoids was synthesized using solid phase synthesis methodologies. The general design of the peptoids was the repeating trimer sequence N(cationic side chain)-N(alkyl or benzyl side chain)-N(α-chiral side chain), where the monomers are N-substituted glycine residues bearing the indicated side chains. The peptoids were designed to have a helical structure with positively charged ammonium or guanidinium groups on side chains that would interact electrostatically with negatively charged sites on heparin. Binding of the peptoids by heparin was characterized by isothermal titration calorimetry (ITC) and heparin affinity chromatography (HAC). The secondary structure of the peptoids was characterized by circular dichroism (CD) spectroscopy. The peptoid design was systematically modified to produce peptoids with high affinity binding to heparin as measured by the above methods, resulting in the synthesis of peptoids with micromolar and sub-micromolar heparin-binding affinity. The efficacy of selected peptoids as agents for neutralization of the anticoagulant activity of heparin was assayed by the Coatest method, which measures restoration of the activity of the serine protease factor Xa (FXa). The results indicate that peptoids show promise as potential therapeutic agents for neutralization of the anticoagulant activity of heparin.


Assuntos
Heparina/química , Peptoides/química , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Calorimetria , Cromatografia de Afinidade , Dicroísmo Circular , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Peptoides/síntese química , Termodinâmica
6.
Database (Oxford) ; 20222022 02 02.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35106535

RESUMO

Critical to answering large-scale questions in biology is the integration of knowledge from different disciplines into a coherent, computable whole. Controlled vocabularies such as ontologies represent a clear path toward this goal. Using survey questionnaires, we examined the attitudes of biologists toward adopting controlled vocabularies in phenotype publications. Our questions cover current experience and overall attitude with controlled vocabularies, the awareness of the issues around ambiguity and inconsistency in phenotype descriptions and post-publication professional data curation, the preferred solutions and the effort and desired rewards for adopting a new authoring workflow. Results suggest that although the existence of controlled vocabularies is widespread, their use is not common. A majority of respondents (74%) are frustrated with ambiguity in phenotypic descriptions, and there is a strong agreement (mean agreement score 4.21 out of 5) that author curation would better reflect the original meaning of phenotype data. Moreover, the vast majority (85%) of researchers would try a new authoring workflow if resultant data were more consistent and less ambiguous. Even more respondents (93%) suggested that they would try and possibly adopt a new authoring workflow if it required 5% additional effort as compared to normal, but higher rates resulted in a steep decline in likely adoption rates. Among the four different types of rewards, two types of citations were the most desired incentives for authors to produce computable data. Overall, our results suggest the adoption of a new authoring workflow would be accelerated by a user-friendly and efficient software-authoring tool, an increased awareness of the challenges text ambiguity creates for external curators and an elevated appreciation of the benefits of controlled vocabularies.


Assuntos
Curadoria de Dados , Software , Atitude , Fenótipo , Fluxo de Trabalho
7.
Database (Oxford) ; 20212021 06 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34156445

RESUMO

Producing findable, accessible, interoperable and reusable (FAIR) data cannot be accomplished solely by data curators in all disciplines. In biology, we have shown that phenotypic data curation is not only costly, but it is burdened with inter-curator variation. We intend to propose a software platform that would enable all data producers, including authors of scientific publications, to produce ontologized data at the time of publication. Working toward this goal, we need to identify ontology construction methods that are preferred by end users. Here, we employ two usability studies to evaluate effectiveness, efficiency and user satisfaction with a set of four methods that allow an end user to add terms and their relations to an ontology. Thirty-three participants took part in a controlled experiment where they evaluated the four methods (Quick Form, Wizard, WebProtégé and Wikidata) after watching demonstration videos and completing a hands-on task. Another think-aloud study was conducted with three professional botanists. The efficiency effectiveness and user confidence in the methods are clearly revealed through statistical and content analyses of participants' comments. Quick Form, Wizard and WebProtégé offer distinct strengths that would benefit our author-driven FAIR data generation system. Features preferred by the participants will guide the design of future iterations.


Assuntos
Ontologia Genética , Software , Humanos
8.
Database (Oxford) ; 20202020 11 20.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33216896

RESUMO

To use published phenotype information in computational analyses, there have been efforts to convert descriptions of phenotype characters from human languages to ontologized statements. This postpublication curation process is not only slow and costly, it is also burdened with significant intercurator variation (including curator-author variation), due to different interpretations of a character by various individuals. This problem is inherent in any human-based intellectual activity. To address this problem, making scientific publications semantically clear (i.e. computable) by the authors at the time of publication is a critical step if we are to avoid postpublication curation. To help authors efficiently produce species phenotypes while producing computable data, we are experimenting with an author-driven ontology development approach and developing and evaluating a series of ontology-aware software modules that would create publishable species descriptions that are readily useable in scientific computations. The first software module prototype called Measurement Recorder has been developed to assist authors in defining continuous measurements and reported in this paper. Two usability studies of the software were conducted with 22 undergraduate students majoring in information science and 32 in biology. Results suggest that participants can use Measurement Recorder without training and they find it easy to use after limited practice. Participants also appreciate the semantic enhancement features. Measurement Recorder's character reuse features facilitate character convergence among participants by 48% and have the potential to further reduce user errors in defining characters. A set of software design issues have also been identified and then corrected. Measurement Recorder enables authors to record measurements in a semantically clear manner and enriches phenotype ontology along the way. Future work includes representing the semantic data as Resource Description Framework (RDF) knowledge graphs and characterizing the division of work between authors as domain knowledge providers and ontology engineers as knowledge formalizers in this new author-driven ontology development approach.


Assuntos
Semântica , Software , Humanos , Fenótipo
9.
PeerJ ; 7: e7538, 2019.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31579569

RESUMO

For those familiar with boreal bogs and wet tundra, species of Eriophorum ("the cotton grasses") will undoubtedly represent some of the most striking and memorable taxa they have encountered. This small genus of 20 Holarctic sedge species (Cyperaceae) is remarkable because its inflorescences produce large, brilliantly white to rusty-red cottony masses when its flowers develop a perianth of highly elongated bristles after anthesis. In this study, we document the rediscovery of Eriophorum scabriculme, a narrow Vietnamese endemic known from only two collections made approximately 7 km apart near Sa Pa in Lào Cai Province over 75 years ago. Using plastid DNA sequences (matK, ndhF), embryology, and morphology, we test whether E. scabriculme is aligned within the Scirpo-Caricoid Clade (genus Khaosokia and tribes Cariceae, Dulichieae, Scirpeae, and Sumatroscirpeae) or the Ficinia Clade (Cypereae), and we determine whether its unique character combinations (≥10 elongated bristles, reduced sheathing basal leaves, 1-4 spikelets) could be evidence for a new genus or simply mark it as an unusual species within currently recognised genera. In addition, we document the discovery of seven new populations, and we extend its range westward to Lai Châu Province and southward in Lào Cai Province by more than 47 km. Our results demonstrate that Eriophorum scabriculme is best treated in the genus Trichophorum, thus re-circumscribing both genera and their limits with Scirpus s.str. In addition, we emend the description of Trichophorum scabriculme (Beetle) J.R.Starr, Lév.-Bourret & B.A. Ford, provide the first pictures and accurate illustration of the species, and assess its conservation status in Vietnam (VU, Vulnerable). Our study corroborates the fact that in such a diverse and taxonomically difficult family like the sedges, conspicuous characters like highly elongated bristles may be useful for dividing diversity, but they are no guarantee that the groups they mark are natural.

10.
Biodivers Data J ; (6): e29616, 2018.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30473620

RESUMO

Phenotypes are used for a multitude of purposes such as defining species, reconstructing phylogenies, diagnosing diseases or improving crop and animal productivity, but most of this phenotypic data is published in free-text narratives that are not computable. This means that the complex relationship between the genome, the environment and phenotypes is largely inaccessible to analysis and important questions related to the evolution of organisms, their diseases or their response to climate change cannot be fully addressed. It takes great effort to manually convert free-text narratives to a computable format before they can be used in large-scale analyses. We argue that this manual curation approach is not a sustainable solution to produce computable phenotypic data for three reasons: 1) it does not scale to all of biodiversity; 2) it does not stop the publication of free-text phenotypes that will continue to need manual curation in the future and, most importantly, 3) It does not solve the problem of inter-curator variation (curators interpret/convert a phenotype differently from each other). Our empirical studies have shown that inter-curator variation is as high as 40% even within a single project. With this level of variation, it is difficult to imagine that data integrated from multiple curation projects can be of high quality. The key causes of this variation have been identified as semantic vagueness in original phenotype descriptions and difficulties in using standardised vocabularies (ontologies). We argue that the authors describing phenotypes are the key to the solution. Given the right tools and appropriate attribution, the authors should be in charge of developing a project's semantics and ontology. This will speed up ontology development and improve the semantic clarity of phenotype descriptions from the moment of publication. A proof of concept project on this idea was funded by NSF ABI in July 2017. We seek readers input or critique of the proposed approaches to help achieve community-based computable phenotype data production in the near future. Results from this project will be accessible through https://biosemantics.github.io/author-driven-production.

11.
Appl Plant Sci ; 5(12)2017 Dec.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29299394

RESUMO

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Constructing complete, accurate plant DNA barcode reference libraries can be logistically challenging for large-scale floras. Here we demonstrate the promise and challenges of using herbarium collections for building a DNA barcode reference library for the vascular plant flora of Canada. METHODS: Our study examined 20,816 specimens representing 5076 of 5190 vascular plant species in Canada (98%). For 98% of the specimens, at least one of the DNA barcode regions was recovered from the plastid loci rbcL and matK and from the nuclear ITS2 region. We used beta regression to quantify the effects of age, type of preservation, and taxonomic affiliation (family) on DNA sequence recovery. RESULTS: Specimen age and method of preservation had significant effects on sequence recovery for all markers, but influenced some families more (e.g., Boraginaceae) than others (e.g., Asteraceae). DISCUSSION: Our DNA barcode library represents an unparalleled resource for metagenomic and ecological genetic research working on temperate and arctic biomes. An observed decline in sequence recovery with specimen age may be associated with poor primer matches, intragenomic variation (for ITS2), or inhibitory secondary compounds in some taxa.

12.
Mol Ecol ; 11(3): 407-20, 2002 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11928707

RESUMO

In a recent study we revealed that the parasitic angiosperm Arceuthobium americanum is comprised of three distinct genetic races, each associated with a different host in regions of allopatry. In order to assess the role of host identity and geographical isolation on race formation in A. americanum, we compared the genetic population structure of this parasite with that of its three principal hosts, Pinus banksiana, Pinus contorta var. latifolia and Pinus contorta var. murrayana. Despite the fact that A. americanum was divided into three genetic races, hosts were divided into only two genetic groups: (i) Pinus banksiana and hybrids, and (ii) P. contorta var. latifolia and var. murrayana. These findings suggest that factors such as geographical isolation and adaptation to different environmental conditions are important for race formation in the absence of host-driven selection pressures. To assess factors impacting population structure at the fine-scale, genetic and geographical distance matrices of host and parasite were compared within A. americanum races. The lack of a relationship between genetic and geographical distance matrices suggests that isolation-by-distance plays a negligible role at this level. The effect of geographical isolation may have been diminished because of the influence of factors such as random seed dispersal by animal vectors or adaptation to nongeographically patterned environmental conditions. Host-parasite interactions might also have impacted the fine-scale structure of A. americanum because the parasite and host were found to have similar patterns of gene flow.


Assuntos
Variação Genética , Pinus/genética , Viscaceae/genética , Genética Populacional , Técnicas de Amplificação de Ácido Nucleico , Filogenia , Pinus/classificação , Pinus/fisiologia , Viscaceae/classificação , Viscaceae/fisiologia
13.
Mol Ecol ; 11(3): 387-405, 2002 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11918778

RESUMO

A population genetic approach was used to explore the evolutionary biology of the parasitic angiosperm Arceuthobium americanum Nutt. ex Engelm. (Viscaceae). Arceuthobium americanum infects three principal hosts and has the most extensive geographical range of any North American dwarf mistletoe. Based on the lack of apparent morphological and phenological differences between populations of A. americanum, past researchers have found no evidence for recognizing infraspecific taxa. In this study, molecular analysis using amplified fragment length polymorphism (AFLP) analysis indicated that A. americanum is divided into three distinct genetic races, each associated with a different host taxon in regions of allopatry: (i) Pinus banksiana in western Canada; (ii) Pinus contorta var. murrayana in the Sierra Nevada and Cascade Mountain ranges in the western US; and (iii) Pinus contorta var. latifolia in the western US and Canada. These observations suggest that host identity, geographical isolation and environmental factors have contributed to race formation in A. americanum. The lack of fine-scale patterning within each of the A. americanum races is attributed to random dispersal of seeds over long distances by animal vectors. Historical factors such as glaciations and founder events have also influenced structuring and genetic diversity in A. americanum populations. Given sufficient time, it is possible that these races will become reproductively isolated and undergo speciation.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Genes de Plantas , Variação Genética , Viscaceae/genética , Canadá , Genética Populacional , Técnicas de Amplificação de Ácido Nucleico , Filogenia , Estados Unidos , Viscaceae/classificação , Viscaceae/fisiologia
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