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1.
PLoS Biol ; 21(7): e3002191, 2023 07.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37463141

RESUMO

We study natural DNA polymorphisms and associated phenotypes in the Arabidopsis relative Cardamine hirsuta. We observed strong genetic differentiation among several ancestry groups and broader distribution of Iberian relict strains in European C. hirsuta compared to Arabidopsis. We found synchronization between vegetative and reproductive development and a pervasive role for heterochronic pathways in shaping C. hirsuta natural variation. A single, fast-cycling ChFRIGIDA allele evolved adaptively allowing range expansion from glacial refugia, unlike Arabidopsis where multiple FRIGIDA haplotypes were involved. The Azores islands, where Arabidopsis is scarce, are a hotspot for C. hirsuta diversity. We identified a quantitative trait locus (QTL) in the heterochronic SPL9 transcription factor as a determinant of an Azorean morphotype. This QTL shows evidence for positive selection, and its distribution mirrors a climate gradient that broadly shaped the Azorean flora. Overall, we establish a framework to explore how the interplay of adaptation, demography, and development shaped diversity patterns of 2 related plant species.


Assuntos
Arabidopsis , Cardamine , Arabidopsis/genética , Cardamine/genética , Genótipo , Fenótipo , Demografia
2.
Am J Bot ; 109(6): 952-965, 2022 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35608078

RESUMO

PREMISE: Plants endemic to oceanic archipelagos are suitable for studying evolution, being isolated on substrates of different ages. Evolution has been recent, rendering traditionally employed sequences insufficiently variable for resolving relationships. This study includes sampling in the genus Tolpis (Asteraceae) from the Azores, Madeira, and Cape Verde, and expands upon an earlier study demonstrating the efficacy of multiplexed shotgun genotyping (MSG) for resolving relationships in Canarian Tolpis. METHODS: Genomic libraries for 90 accessions of Tolpis and two from the outgroup were generated for genotyping individuals using MSG. Loci were de novo assembled with iPyrad, which clusters MSG loci within and between samples. A maximum likelihood phylogeny was generated with RAxML. Ancestral area reconstruction was inferred using R package BioGeoBEARS. RESULTS: MSG data recovered a highly resolved phylogeny from population to inter-archipelago levels. Ancestral area reconstruction provided biogeographic hypotheses for the radiation of Macaronesian Tolpis. CONCLUSIONS: Four major clades were resolved. The Madeiran endemic T. macrorhiza is sister to other Tolpis. Species from the Canaries, Cape Verdes, and the continent are sister to T. succulenta from Madeira, which has a sister subclade of Azorean populations composed of T. succulenta and T. azorica. Population-level resolution suggests unrecognized taxa on several archipelagos. Ancestral reconstruction suggests initial dispersal from the continent to Madeira, with dispersal to the Azores, then dispersal from Madeira to the Canary Islands, with both subsequent dispersal to the Cape Verdes and back-dispersal to the continent. Single-island radiations and inter-island dispersal are implicated in divergence in Macaronesian Tolpis.


Assuntos
Asteraceae , Asteraceae/genética , Açores , Genótipo , Filogenia
3.
Oecologia ; 200(1-2): 209-219, 2022 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36114943

RESUMO

Community-level studies linking plant mycorrhizal status to environment usually do not account for within-plot mycorrhizal status variability; thus, patterns of plant mycorrhizal status diversity are largely unknown. Here, we assessed the relative importance of within- and between-plot variability components in mycorrhizal status and examined how plant mycorrhizal status diversity is related to soil nutrient availability. We hypothesised larger between-plot variability in mycorrhizal status and higher plant mycorrhizal status diversity in P-poor soils. To test these hypotheses, we used plant phylogenies, vegetation, soil and plant mycorrhizal status data from Czech semi-natural grasslands and Scottish coastal habitats. We divided plant mycorrhizal status diversity into divergence and evenness and tested their relations to soil P, K, Ca and Mg. Within-plot variability component of mycorrhizal status was always, on average, at least 2.2 times larger than between-plot variability in our datasets. Plant mycorrhizal status divergence was positively related to Ca (in both datasets) and Mg (only in grasslands and when accounting for phylogeny). In grasslands, the relationship between Mg and plant mycorrhizal status evenness was negative when accounting for phylogeny, while it was positive when not accounting for phylogeny. Plant mycorrhizal status diversity was not linked to P and its relation to K was inconsistent. Our results suggest that high Ca in the soil can promote coexistence of mycorrhizal, facultatively mycorrhizal and non-mycorrhizal plant species. We encourage future studies to also focus on within-plot variability in mycorrhizal status, because it appears to be highly relevant in herbaceous systems.


Assuntos
Micorrizas , Biodiversidade , Ecossistema , Pradaria , Plantas , Solo , Microbiologia do Solo
4.
Mycorrhiza ; 31(5): 577-587, 2021 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34490546

RESUMO

Plant mycorrhizal status (a trait indicating the ability to form mycorrhizas) can be a useful plant trait for predicting changes in vegetation influenced by increased fertility. Mycorrhizal fungi enhance nutrient uptake and are expected to provide a competitive advantage for plants growing in nutrient-poor soils; while in nutrient-rich soils, mycorrhizal symbiosis may be disadvantageous. Some studies in natural systems have shown that mycorrhizal plants can be more frequent in P and N-poor soils (low nutrient availability) or Ca and Mg-high (high pH) soils, but empirical support is still not clear. Using vegetation and soil data from Scottish coastal habitats, and Latvian and Czech grasslands, we examined whether there is a link between plant mycorrhizal status and plant-available P, N, Ca and Mg. We performed the max test analysis (to examine the central tendency) and a combination of quantile regression and meta-analysis (to examine tendencies in different quantiles) on both community and plant species data combined with plant phylogenies. We consistently found no changes in mycorrhizal status at the community and species levels along the gradients of plant-available P, N, Ca and Mg in the central tendency and in almost all quantiles across all datasets. Thus, we found no support for the hypotheses that herbaceous species which are able to form mycorrhizas are more frequent in nutrient-poor and high pH environments. Obligatory, facultatively and non-mycorrhizal herbaceous species appear to assemble randomly along the gradients of nutrient availability in several European herbaceous habitats, suggesting that all these strategies perform similarly under non-extreme soil nutrient conditions.


Assuntos
Micorrizas , Ecossistema , Pradaria , Nutrientes , Plantas , Solo , Microbiologia do Solo
5.
New Phytol ; 226(5): 1240-1255, 2020 06.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-31230355

RESUMO

Some of the World's most valuable crops, including watermelon, honey melon, cucumber, squash, zucchini and pumpkin, belong to the family Cucurbitaceae. We review insights on their domestication from new phylogenies, archaeology and genomic studies. Ancestral state estimation on the most complete Cucurbitaceae phylogeny to date suggests that an annual life cycle may have contributed to domestication. Domestication started c. 11 000 years ago in the New World and Asia, and apparently more recently in Africa. Some cucurbit crops were domesticated only once, others multiple times (e.g. melon from different Asian and African populations). Most wild cucurbit fruits are bitter and nonpalatable to humans, and nonbitterness of the pulp apparently was a trait favoured early during domestication, with genomic data showing how bitterness loss was achieved convergently. The genetic pathways underlying lycopene accumulation, red or orange pulp colour, and fruit size and shape are only just beginning to be understood. The study of cucurbit domestication in recent years has benefitted from the increasing integration of archaeological and genomic data with insights from herbarium collections, the most efficient way to understand species' natural geographic ranges and climate adaptations.


Assuntos
Cucurbitaceae , África , Arqueologia , Ásia , Cucurbitaceae/genética , Domesticação , Genômica , Filogenia
7.
BMC Evol Biol ; 18(1): 119, 2018 08 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30075699

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The majority of wood decomposing fungi are mushroom-forming Agaricomycetes, which exhibit two main modes of plant cell wall decomposition: white rot, in which all plant cell wall components are degraded, including lignin, and brown rot, in which lignin is modified but not appreciably removed. Previous studies suggested that brown rot fungi tend to be specialists of gymnosperm hosts and that brown rot promotes gymnosperm specialization. However, these hypotheses were based on analyses of limited datasets of Agaricomycetes. Overcoming this limitation, we used a phylogeny with 1157 species integrating available sequences, assembled decay mode characters from the literature, and coded host specialization using the newly developed R package, rusda. RESULTS: We found that most brown rot fungi are generalists or gymnosperm specialists, whereas most white rot fungi are angiosperm specialists. A six-state model of the evolution of host specialization revealed high transition rates between generalism and specialization in both decay modes. However, while white rot lineages switched most frequently to angiosperm specialists, brown rot lineages switched most frequently to generalism. A time-calibrated phylogeny revealed that Agaricomycetes is older than the flowering plants but many of the large clades originated after the diversification of the angiosperms in the Cretaceous. CONCLUSIONS: Our results challenge the current view that brown rot fungi are primarily gymnosperm specialists and reveal intensive white rot specialization to angiosperm hosts. We thus suggest that brown rot associated convergent loss of lignocellulose degrading enzymes was correlated with host generalism, rather than gymnosperm specialism. A likelihood model of host specialization evolution together with a time-calibrated phylogeny further suggests that the rise of the angiosperms opened a new mega-niche for wood-decay fungi, which was exploited particularly well by white rot lineages.


Assuntos
Basidiomycota/fisiologia , Evolução Biológica , Cycadopsida/microbiologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , Madeira/microbiologia , Basidiomycota/classificação , Carpóforos/metabolismo , Modelos Biológicos , Filogenia , Especificidade da Espécie
8.
Am J Bot ; 105(10): 1662-1671, 2018 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30299543

RESUMO

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: The domestication history of melon is still unclear. An African or Asian origin has been suggested, but its closest wild relative was recently revealed to be an Australian species. The complicated taxonomic history of melon has resulted in additional confusion, with a high number of misidentified germplasm collections currently used by breeders and in genomics research. METHODS: Using seven DNA regions sequenced for 90% of the genus and the major cultivar groups, we sort out described names and infer evolutionary origins and domestication centers. KEY RESULTS: We found that modern melon cultivars go back to two lineages, which diverged ca. 2 million years ago. One is restricted to Asia (Cucumis melo subsp. melo), and the second, here described as C. melo subsp. meloides, is restricted to Africa. The Asian lineage has given rise to the widely commercialized cultivar groups and their market types, while the African lineage gave rise to cultivars still grown in the Sudanian region. We show that C. trigonus, an overlooked perennial and drought-tolerant species from India is among the closest living relatives of C. melo. CONCLUSIONS: Melon was domesticated at least twice: in Africa and Asia. The African lineage and the Indian C. trigonus are exciting new resources for breeding of melons tolerant to climate change.


Assuntos
Cucumis melo/genética , Domesticação , Evolução Molecular , África , Ásia , Cucumis melo/classificação , Índia , Análise de Sequência de DNA
9.
Biochem Genet ; 56(4): 315-340, 2018 Aug.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29478137

RESUMO

The phylogenetic relationships and phylogeography of two relatively rare Macaronesian Lactuca species, Lactuca watsoniana (Azores) and L. palmensis (Canary Islands), were, until this date, unclear. Karyological information of the Azorean species was also unknown. For this study, a chromosome count was performed and L. watsoniana showed 2n = 34. A phylogenetic approach was used to clarify the relationships of the Azorean endemic L. watsoniana and the La Palma endemic L. palmensis within the subtribe Lactucinae. Maximum parsimony, Maximum likelihood and Bayesian analysis of a combined molecular dataset (ITS and four chloroplast DNA regions) and molecular clock analyses were performed with the Macaronesian Lactuca species, as well as a TCS haplotype network. The analyses revealed that L. watsoniana and L. palmensis belong to different subclades of the Lactuca clade. Lactuca watsoniana showed a strongly supported phylogenetic relationship with North American species, while L. palmensis was closely related to L. tenerrima and L. inermis, from Europe and Africa. Lactuca watsoniana showed four single-island haplotypes. A divergence time estimation of the Macaronesian lineages was used to examine island colonization pathways. Results obtained with BEAST suggest a divergence of L. palmensis and L. watsoniana clades c. 11 million years ago, L. watsoniana diverged from its North American sister species c. 3.8 million years ago and L. palmensis diverged from its sister L. tenerrima, c. 1.3 million years ago, probably originating from an African ancestral lineage which colonized the Canary Islands. Divergence analyses with *BEAST indicate a more recent divergence of the L. watsoniana crown, c. 0.9 million years ago. In the Azores colonization, in a stepping stone, east-to-west dispersal pattern, associated with geological events might explain the current distribution range of L. watsoniana.


Assuntos
Lactuca/classificação , Filogeografia , Teorema de Bayes , Cromossomos de Plantas , DNA de Cloroplastos/genética , Haplótipos , Cariotipagem , Lactuca/genética , Funções Verossimilhança , Espanha , Especificidade da Espécie
10.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 111(16): 5914-9, 2014 Apr 22.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24706921

RESUMO

Many major branches in the Tree of Life are marked by stereotyped body plans that have been maintained over long periods of time. One possible explanation for this stasis is that there are genetic or developmental constraints that restrict the origin of novel body plans. An alternative is that basic body plans are potentially quite labile, but are actively maintained by natural selection. We present evidence that the conserved floral morphology of a species-rich flowering plant clade, Malpighiaceae, has been actively maintained for tens of millions of years via stabilizing selection imposed by their specialist New World oil-bee pollinators. Nine clades that have lost their primary oil-bee pollinators show major evolutionary shifts in specific floral traits associated with oil-bee pollination, demonstrating that developmental constraint is not the primary cause of morphological stasis in Malpighiaceae. Interestingly, Malpighiaceae show a burst in species diversification coinciding with the origin of this plant-pollinator mutualism. One hypothesis to account for radiation despite morphological stasis is that although selection on pollinator efficiency explains the origin of this unique and conserved floral morphology, tight pollinator specificity subsequently permitted greatly enhanced diversification in this system.


Assuntos
Abelhas/fisiologia , Flores/anatomia & histologia , Flores/fisiologia , Malpighiaceae/anatomia & histologia , Malpighiaceae/fisiologia , Polinização/fisiologia , Simbiose/fisiologia , Animais , Evolução Biológica , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , Especificidade da Espécie
11.
Mol Biol Evol ; 32(2): 392-405, 2015 Feb.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25376175

RESUMO

Cyclic proteins have evolved for millions of years across all kingdoms of life to confer structural stability over their acyclic counterparts while maintaining intrinsic functional properties. Here, we show that cyclic miniproteins (or peptides) from Momordica (Cucurbitaceae) seeds evolved in species that diverged from an African ancestor around 19 Ma. The ability to achieve head-to-tail cyclization of Momordica cyclic peptides appears to have been acquired through a series of mutations in their acyclic precursor coding sequences following recent and independent gene expansion event(s). Evolutionary analysis of Momordica cyclic peptides reveals sites that are under selection, highlighting residues that are presumably constrained for maintaining their function as potent trypsin inhibitors. Molecular dynamics of Momordica cyclic peptides in complex with trypsin reveals site-specific residues involved in target binding. In a broader context, this study provides a basis for selecting Momordica species to further investigate the biosynthesis of the cyclic peptides and for constructing libraries that may be screened against evolutionarily related serine proteases implicated in human diseases.


Assuntos
Momordica/metabolismo , Peptídeos Cíclicos/metabolismo , Proteínas de Plantas/metabolismo , Sementes/metabolismo , Evolução Biológica , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Momordica/genética , Peptídeos Cíclicos/genética , Proteínas de Plantas/genética , Inibidores de Serina Proteinase/metabolismo
12.
Plant Cell ; 24(7): 2765-78, 2012 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22822203

RESUMO

The cyclic miniprotein Momordica cochinchinensis Trypsin Inhibitor II (MCoTI-II) (34 amino acids) is a potent trypsin inhibitor (TI) and a favored scaffold for drug design. We have cloned the corresponding genes and determined that each precursor protein contains a tandem series of cyclic TIs terminating with the more commonly known, and potentially ancestral, acyclic TI. Expression of the precursor protein in Arabidopsis thaliana showed that production of the cyclic TIs, but not the terminal acyclic TI, depends on asparaginyl endopeptidase (AEP) for maturation. The nature of their repetitive sequences and the almost identical structures of emerging TIs suggest these cyclic peptides evolved by internal gene amplification associated with recruitment of AEP for processing between domain repeats. This is the third example of similar AEP-mediated processing of a class of cyclic peptides from unrelated precursor proteins in phylogenetically distant plant families. This suggests that production of cyclic peptides in angiosperms has evolved in parallel using AEP as a constraining evolutionary channel. We believe this is evolutionary evidence that, in addition to its known roles in proteolysis, AEP is especially suited to performing protein cyclization.


Assuntos
Ciclotídeos/genética , Cisteína Endopeptidases/metabolismo , Miniproteínas Nó de Cistina/genética , Momordica/genética , Peptídeos Cíclicos/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Arabidopsis/genética , Arabidopsis/metabolismo , Ciclotídeos/química , Ciclotídeos/metabolismo , Miniproteínas Nó de Cistina/química , Miniproteínas Nó de Cistina/metabolismo , DNA de Plantas/genética , Evolução Molecular , Amplificação de Genes , Modelos Moleculares , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Momordica/metabolismo , Peptídeos Cíclicos/química , Peptídeos Cíclicos/metabolismo , Filogenia , Conformação Proteica , Estrutura Terciária de Proteína , Alinhamento de Sequência , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos
13.
Am J Bot ; 102(10): 1736-46, 2015 Oct.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26453597

RESUMO

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: Oceanic island endemics typically exhibit very restricted distributions. In Macaronesia, only one endemic angiosperm species, Ranunculus cortusifolius, has a distribution spanning the archipelagos of the Azores, Madeira, and Canaries. Earlier work suggested possible differences between archipelagos and the multiple origins of the species. This paper tests the hypothesis that R. cortusifolius is a single widespread Macaronesian endemic species with a single origin. METHODS: Chloroplast (matK-trnK, psbJ-petA) and ITS sequences were generated from across the distribution of R. cortusifolius. Relationships were investigated using Bayesian inference and divergence times estimated using BEAST. Infraspecific variation was investigated using statistical parsimony. The general mixed Yule-coalescent model (GMYC) was further used to identify putative species boundaries based on maternally inherited plastid data. KEY RESULTS: The hypothesis of multiple independent origins of R. cortusifolius is rejected. Divergence of the R. cortusifolius lineage from a western Mediterranean sister group in the late Miocene is inferred. Distinct genotypes were resolved within R. cortusifolius that are endemic to the Azores, Madeira, and the Canaries. Four to five putative species were delimited by different versions of the GMYC model. CONCLUSION: Ranunculus cortusifolius is the result of a single colonization of Macaronesia. The large distances between archipelagos have been effective barriers to dispersal, promoting allopatric diversification at the molecular level with diversification also evident within the Canaries. Isolation has not been accompanied by marked morphological diversification, which may be explained by the typical association of R. cortusifolius with stable and climatically buffered laurel forest communities.


Assuntos
Especiação Genética , Dispersão Vegetal , Ranunculus/genética , Ilhas Atlânticas , DNA de Cloroplastos/genética , DNA de Plantas/genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Filogenia , Filogeografia , Análise de Sequência de DNA
14.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 109(43): 17519-24, 2012 Oct 23.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23045684

RESUMO

The angiosperm order Malpighiales includes ~16,000 species and constitutes up to 40% of the understory tree diversity in tropical rain forests. Despite remarkable progress in angiosperm systematics during the last 20 y, relationships within Malpighiales remain poorly resolved, possibly owing to its rapid rise during the mid-Cretaceous. Using phylogenomic approaches, including analyses of 82 plastid genes from 58 species, we identified 12 additional clades in Malpighiales and substantially increased resolution along the backbone. This greatly improved phylogeny revealed a dynamic history of shifts in net diversification rates across Malpighiales, with bursts of diversification noted in the Barbados cherries (Malpighiaceae), cocas (Erythroxylaceae), and passion flowers (Passifloraceae). We found that commonly used a priori approaches for partitioning concatenated data in maximum likelihood analyses, by gene or by codon position, performed poorly relative to the use of partitions identified a posteriori using a Bayesian mixture model. We also found better branch support in trees inferred from a taxon-rich, data-sparse matrix, which deeply sampled only the phylogenetically critical placeholders, than in trees inferred from a taxon-sparse matrix with little missing data. Although this matrix has more missing data, our a posteriori partitioning strategy reduced the possibility of producing multiple distinct but equally optimal topologies and increased phylogenetic decisiveness, compared with the strategy of partitioning by gene. These approaches are likely to help improve phylogenetic resolution in other poorly resolved major clades of angiosperms and to be more broadly useful in studies across the Tree of Life.


Assuntos
Genoma de Planta , Malpighiaceae/genética , Filogenia , Funções Verossimilhança , Malpighiaceae/classificação , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Especificidade da Espécie
15.
New Phytol ; 201(1): 305-311, 2014 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24010958

RESUMO

A fundamental challenge to our understanding of biodiversity is to explain why some groups of species diversify, whereas others do not. On islands, the gradual evolution of a new species from a founder event has been called 'anagenetic speciation'. This process does not lead to rapid and extensive speciation within lineages and has received little attention. Based on a survey of the endemic bryophyte, pteridophyte and spermatophyte floras of nine oceanic archipelagos, we show that anagenesis, as measured by the proportion of genera with single endemic species within a genus, is much higher in bryophytes (73%) and pteridophytes (65%) than in spermatophytes (55%). Anagenesis contributed 49% of bryophyte and 40% of endemic pteridophyte species, but only 17% of spermatophytes. The vast majority of endemic bryophytes and pteridophytes are restricted to subtropical evergreen laurel forests and failed to diversify in more open environments, in contrast with the pattern exhibited by spermatophytes. We propose that the dominance of anagenesis in island bryophytes and pteridophytes is a result of a mixture of intrinsic factors, notably their strong preference for (sub)tropical forest environments, and extrinsic factors, including the long-term macro-ecological stability of these habitats and the associated strong phylogenetic niche conservatism of their floras.


Assuntos
Ecossistema , Embriófitas/genética , Especiação Genética , Filogenia , Esporos , Biodiversidade , Briófitas/genética , Ecologia , Traqueófitas
16.
Am Nat ; 181 Suppl 1: S21-34, 2013 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23598357

RESUMO

Herbivores are credited with driving the evolutionary diversification of plant defensive strategies over macroevolutionary time. For this to be true, herbivores must also cause short-term evolution within plant populations, but few studies have experimentally tested this prediction. We addressed this gap using a long-term manipulative field experiment where exclosures protected 22 plant populations from natural rabbit herbivory for <1 to 26 years. We collected seeds of Rumex acetosa L. (Polygonaceae) from our plots and grew them in a common greenhouse environment to quantify evolved differences among populations in individual plant growth rate, tolerance to herbivory, competitive ability, and the concentration of secondary metabolites (tannins and oxalate) implicated in defense against herbivores. In 26 years without rabbit herbivory, plant growth rate decreased linearly by 30%. We argue that plant growth rate has evolved as a defense against intense rabbit herbivory. In contrast, we found no change in tolerance to herbivory or concentrations of secondary metabolites. We also found no change in competitive ability, suggesting that contemporary evolution may not feed back to alter ecological interactions within this plant community. Our results combined with those of other studies show that the evolution of gross morphological traits such as growth rate in response to herbivory may be common, which calls into question assumptions about some of the most popular theories of plant defense.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Herbivoria , Rumex/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Rumex/genética , Animais , Oxalatos/metabolismo , Coelhos , Rumex/fisiologia , Taninos/metabolismo
17.
Am J Bot ; 100(7): 1407-21, 2013 Jul.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23797366

RESUMO

PREMISE OF THE STUDY: The study of how phenology may contribute to the assembly of plant communities has a long history in ecology. Climate change has brought renewed interest in this area, with many studies examining how phenology may contribute to the success of exotic species. In particular, there is increasing evidence that exotic species occupy unique phenological niches and track climate change more closely than native species. METHODS: Here, we use long-term records of species' first flowering dates from fi ve northern hemisphere temperate sites (Chinnor, UK and in the United States, Concord, Massachusetts; Fargo, North Dakota; Konza Prairie, Kansas; and Washington,D.C.) to examine whether invaders have distinct phenologies. Using a broad phylogenetic framework, we tested for differences between exotic and native species in mean annual flowering time, phenological changes in response to temperature and precipitation,and longer-term shifts in first flowering dates during recent pronounced climate change ("flowering time shifts"). KEY RESULTS: Across North American sites, exotic species have shifted flowering with climate change while native species, on average, have not. In the three mesic systems, exotic species exhibited higher tracking of interannual variation in temperature,such that flowering advances more with warming, than native species. Across the two grassland systems, however, exotic species differed from native species primarily in responses to precipitation and soil moisture, not temperature. CONCLUSIONS: Our findings provide cross-site support for the role of phenology and climate change in explaining species' invasions.Further, they support recent evidence that exotic species may be important drivers of extended growing seasons observed with climate change in North America.


Assuntos
Mudança Climática , Espécies Introduzidas , Fenômenos Fisiológicos Vegetais , Plantas/classificação , Plantas/genética , Temperatura , Demografia , Filogenia , Especificidade da Espécie , Fatores de Tempo , Reino Unido , Estados Unidos
18.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 107(32): 14269-73, 2010 Aug 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20656934

RESUMO

Among the fundamental questions regarding cultivated plants is their geographic origin and region of domestication. The genus Cucumis, which includes cucumber (Cucumis sativus) and melon (Cucumis melo), has numerous wild African species, and it has therefore been assumed that melon originated in Africa. For cucumber, this seemed less likely because wild cucumbers exist in India and a closely related species lives in the Eastern Himalayas. Using DNA sequences from plastid and nuclear markers for some 100 Cucumis accessions from Africa, Australia, and Asia, we show here that melon and cucumber are of Asian origin and have numerous previously overlooked species-level relatives in Australia and around the Indian Ocean. The wild progenitor of C. melo occurs in India, and our data confirm that the Southeast Asian Cucumis hystrix is the closest relative of cucumber. Most surprisingly, the closest relative of melon is Cucumis picrocarpus from Australia. C. melo diverged from this Australian sister species approximately 3 Ma, and both diverged from the remaining Asian/Australian species approximately 10 Ma. The Asian/Australian Cucumis clade comprises at least 25 species, nine of them new to science, and diverged from its African relatives in the Miocene, approximately 12 Ma. Range reconstruction under maximum likelihood suggests Asia as the ancestral area for the most recent common ancestor of melon and cucumber, fitting with both having progenitor populations in the Himalayan region and high genetic diversity of C. melo landraces in India and China. Future investigations of wild species related to melon and cucumber should concentrate on Asia and Australia.


Assuntos
Cucumis sativus/genética , Cucurbitaceae/genética , Filogenia , Ásia , Austrália , Sequência de Bases , Marcadores Genéticos , Especiação Genética , Geografia
19.
BMC Ecol Evol ; 23(1): 75, 2023 12 12.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38087247

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: Despite recent advances, reliable tools to simultaneously handle different types of sequencing data (e.g., target capture, genome skimming) for phylogenomics are still scarce. Here, we evaluate the performance of the recently developed pipeline Captus in comparison with the well-known target capture pipelines HybPiper and SECAPR. As test data, we analyzed newly generated sequences for the genus Thladiantha (Cucurbitaceae) for which no well-resolved phylogeny estimate has been available so far, as well as simulated reads derived from the genome of Arabidopsis thaliana. RESULTS: Our pipeline comparisons are based on (1) the time needed for data assembly and locus extraction, (2) locus recovery per sample, (3) the number of informative sites in nucleotide alignments, and (4) the topology of the nuclear and plastid phylogenies. Additionally, the simulated reads derived from the genome of Arabidopsis thaliana were used to evaluate the accuracy and completeness of the recovered loci. In terms of computation time, locus recovery per sample, and informative sites, Captus outperforms HybPiper and SECAPR. The resulting topologies of Captus and SECAPR are identical for coalescent trees but differ when trees are inferred from concatenated alignments. The HybPiper phylogeny is similar to Captus in both methods. The nuclear genes recover a deep split of Thladiantha in two clades, but this is not supported by the plastid data. CONCLUSIONS: Captus is the best choice among the three pipelines in terms of computation time and locus recovery. Even though there is no significant topological difference between the Thladiantha species trees produced by the three pipelines, Captus yields a higher number of gene trees in agreement with the topology of the species tree (i.e., fewer genes in conflict with the species tree topology).


Assuntos
Arabidopsis , Cucurbitaceae , Filogenia , Cucurbitaceae/genética , Arabidopsis/genética , Genoma
20.
BMC Evol Biol ; 12: 108, 2012 Jul 03.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22759528

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: The Cucurbitaceae genus Trichosanthes comprises 90-100 species that occur from India to Japan and southeast to Australia and Fiji. Most species have large white or pale yellow petals with conspicuously fringed margins, the fringes sometimes several cm long. Pollination is usually by hawkmoths. Previous molecular data for a small number of species suggested that a monophyletic Trichosanthes might include the Asian genera Gymnopetalum (four species, lacking long petal fringes) and Hodgsonia (two species with petals fringed). Here we test these groups' relationships using a species sampling of c. 60% and 4759 nucleotides of nuclear and plastid DNA. To infer the time and direction of the geographic expansion of the Trichosanthes clade we employ molecular clock dating and statistical biogeographic reconstruction, and we also address the gain or loss of petal fringes. RESULTS: Trichosanthes is monophyletic as long as it includes Gymnopetalum, which itself is polyphyletic. The closest relative of Trichosanthes appears to be the sponge gourds, Luffa, while Hodgsonia is more distantly related. Of six morphology-based sections in Trichosanthes with more than one species, three are supported by the molecular results; two new sections appear warranted. Molecular dating and biogeographic analyses suggest an Oligocene origin of Trichosanthes in Eurasia or East Asia, followed by diversification and spread throughout the Malesian biogeographic region and into the Australian continent. CONCLUSIONS: Long-fringed corollas evolved independently in Hodgsonia and Trichosanthes, followed by two losses in the latter coincident with shifts to other pollinators but not with long-distance dispersal events. Together with the Caribbean Linnaeosicyos, the Madagascan Ampelosicyos and the tropical African Telfairia, these cucurbit lineages represent an ideal system for more detailed studies of the evolution and function of petal fringes in plant-pollinator mutualisms.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Flores/anatomia & histologia , Filogenia , Trichosanthes/genética , Ásia , Austrália , Teorema de Bayes , Núcleo Celular/genética , DNA de Cloroplastos/genética , DNA de Plantas/genética , DNA Espaçador Ribossômico/genética , Funções Verossimilhança , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Trichosanthes/anatomia & histologia
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