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1.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 181: 107714, 2023 04.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-36708940

RESUMO

Anchored Hybrid Enrichment (AHE) is a tool for capturing orthologous regions of the nuclear genome shared in low or single copy across lineages. Despite the increasing number of studies using this method, its usefulness to estimate relationships at deeper taxonomic levels in plants has not been fully explored. Here we present a proof of concept about the performance of nuclear loci obtained with AHE to infer phylogenetic relationships and explore the use of gene sampling schemes to estimate divergence times in Asterales. We recovered low-copy nuclear loci using the AHE method from herbarium material and silica-preserved samples. Maximum likelihood, Bayesian inference, and coalescence approaches were used to reconstruct phylogenomic relationships. Dating analyses were conducted under a multispecies coalescent approach by jointly inferring species tree and divergence times with random gene sampling schemes and multiple calibrations. We recovered 403 low-copy nuclear loci for 63 species representing nine out of eleven families of Asterales. Phylogenetic hypotheses were congruent among the applied methods and previously published results. Analyses with concatenated datasets were strongly supported, but coalescence-based analyses showed low support for the phylogenetic position of families Argophyllaceae and Alseuosmiaceae. Estimated family ages were congruent among gene sampling schemes, with the mean age for Asterales around 130 Myr. Our study documents the usefulness of AHE for resolving phylogenetic relationships at deep phylogenetic levels in Asterales. Observed phylogenetic inconsistencies were possibly due to the non-inclusion of families Phellinceae and Pentaphragmataceae. Random gene sampling schemes produced consistent age estimates with coalescence and species tree relaxed clock approaches.


Assuntos
Magnoliopsida , Filogenia , Magnoliopsida/genética , Teorema de Bayes , Genoma , Núcleo Celular/genética
2.
Front Plant Sci ; 13: 850521, 2022.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35498660

RESUMO

The economically important cotton and cacao family (Malvaceae sensu lato) have long been recognized as a monophyletic group. However, the relationships among some subfamilies are still unclear as discordant phylogenetic hypotheses keep arising when different sources of molecular data are analyzed. Phylogenetic discordance has previously been hypothesized to be the result of both introgression and incomplete lineage sorting (ILS), but the extent and source of discordance have not yet been evaluated in the context of loci derived from massive sequencing strategies and for a wide representation of the family. Furthermore, no formal methods have been applied to evaluate if the detected phylogenetic discordance among phylogenomic datasets influences phylogenetic dating estimates of the concordant relationships. The objective of this research was to generate a phylogenetic hypothesis of Malvaceae from nuclear genes, specifically we aimed to (1) investigate the presence of major discordance among hundreds of nuclear gene histories of Malvaceae; (2) evaluate the potential source of discordance; and (3) examine whether discordance and loci heterogeneity influence on time estimates of the origin and diversification of subfamilies. Our study is based on a comprehensive dataset representing 96 genera of the nine subfamilies and 268 nuclear loci. Both concatenated and coalescence-based approaches were followed for phylogenetic inference. Using branch lengths and topology, we located the placement of introgression events to directly evaluate whether discordance is due to introgression rather than ILS. To estimate divergence times, concordance and molecular rate were considered. We filtered loci based on congruence with the species tree and then obtained the molecular rate of each locus to distribute them into three different sets corresponding to shared molecular rate ranges. Bayesian dating was performed for each of the different sets of loci with the same parameters and calibrations. Phylogenomic discordance was detected between methods, as well as gene histories. At deep coalescent times, we found discordance in the position of five subclades probably due to ILS and a relatively small proportion of introgression. Divergence time estimation with each set of loci generated overlapping clade ages, indicating that, even with different molecular rate and gene histories, calibrations generally provide a strong prior.

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