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OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics

BACKGROUND: Molecular sequence data have become the standard in modern day phylogenetics. In particular, several long-standing questions of mammalian evolutionary history have been recently resolved thanks to the use of molecular characters. Yet, most studies have focused on only a handful of standa...

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Autores principales: Ranwez, Vincent, Delsuc, Frédéric, Ranwez, Sylvie, Belkhir, Khalid, Tilak, Marie-Ka, Douzery, Emmanuel JP
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2007
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2249597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18053139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-241
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author Ranwez, Vincent
Delsuc, Frédéric
Ranwez, Sylvie
Belkhir, Khalid
Tilak, Marie-Ka
Douzery, Emmanuel JP
author_facet Ranwez, Vincent
Delsuc, Frédéric
Ranwez, Sylvie
Belkhir, Khalid
Tilak, Marie-Ka
Douzery, Emmanuel JP
author_sort Ranwez, Vincent
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Molecular sequence data have become the standard in modern day phylogenetics. In particular, several long-standing questions of mammalian evolutionary history have been recently resolved thanks to the use of molecular characters. Yet, most studies have focused on only a handful of standard markers. The availability of an ever increasing number of whole genome sequences is a golden mine for modern systematics. Genomic data now provide the opportunity to select new markers that are potentially relevant for further resolving branches of the mammalian phylogenetic tree at various taxonomic levels. DESCRIPTION: The EnsEMBL database was used to determine a set of orthologous genes from 12 available complete mammalian genomes. As targets for possible amplification and sequencing in additional taxa, more than 3,000 exons of length > 400 bp have been selected, among which 118, 368, 608, and 674 are respectively retrieved for 12, 11, 10, and 9 species. A bioinformatic pipeline has been developed to provide evolutionary descriptors for these candidate markers in order to assess their potential phylogenetic utility. The resulting OrthoMaM (Orthologous Mammalian Markers) database can be queried and alignments can be downloaded through a dedicated web interface . CONCLUSION: The importance of marker choice in phylogenetic studies has long been stressed. Our database centered on complete genome information now makes possible to select promising markers to a given phylogenetic question or a systematic framework by querying a number of evolutionary descriptors. The usefulness of the database is illustrated with two biological examples. First, two potentially useful markers were identified for rodent systematics based on relevant evolutionary parameters and sequenced in additional species. Second, a complete, gapless 94 kb supermatrix of 118 orthologous exons was assembled for 12 mammals. Phylogenetic analyses using probabilistic methods unambiguously supported the new placental phylogeny by retrieving the monophyly of Glires, Euarchontoglires, Laurasiatheria, and Boreoeutheria. Muroid rodents thus do not represent a basal placental lineage as it was mistakenly reasserted in some recent phylogenomic analyses based on fewer taxa. We expect the OrthoMaM database to be useful for further resolving the phylogenetic tree of placental mammals and for better understanding the evolutionary dynamics of their genomes, i.e., the forces that shaped coding sequences in terms of selective constraints.
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spelling pubmed-22495972008-02-26 OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics Ranwez, Vincent Delsuc, Frédéric Ranwez, Sylvie Belkhir, Khalid Tilak, Marie-Ka Douzery, Emmanuel JP BMC Evol Biol Database BACKGROUND: Molecular sequence data have become the standard in modern day phylogenetics. In particular, several long-standing questions of mammalian evolutionary history have been recently resolved thanks to the use of molecular characters. Yet, most studies have focused on only a handful of standard markers. The availability of an ever increasing number of whole genome sequences is a golden mine for modern systematics. Genomic data now provide the opportunity to select new markers that are potentially relevant for further resolving branches of the mammalian phylogenetic tree at various taxonomic levels. DESCRIPTION: The EnsEMBL database was used to determine a set of orthologous genes from 12 available complete mammalian genomes. As targets for possible amplification and sequencing in additional taxa, more than 3,000 exons of length > 400 bp have been selected, among which 118, 368, 608, and 674 are respectively retrieved for 12, 11, 10, and 9 species. A bioinformatic pipeline has been developed to provide evolutionary descriptors for these candidate markers in order to assess their potential phylogenetic utility. The resulting OrthoMaM (Orthologous Mammalian Markers) database can be queried and alignments can be downloaded through a dedicated web interface . CONCLUSION: The importance of marker choice in phylogenetic studies has long been stressed. Our database centered on complete genome information now makes possible to select promising markers to a given phylogenetic question or a systematic framework by querying a number of evolutionary descriptors. The usefulness of the database is illustrated with two biological examples. First, two potentially useful markers were identified for rodent systematics based on relevant evolutionary parameters and sequenced in additional species. Second, a complete, gapless 94 kb supermatrix of 118 orthologous exons was assembled for 12 mammals. Phylogenetic analyses using probabilistic methods unambiguously supported the new placental phylogeny by retrieving the monophyly of Glires, Euarchontoglires, Laurasiatheria, and Boreoeutheria. Muroid rodents thus do not represent a basal placental lineage as it was mistakenly reasserted in some recent phylogenomic analyses based on fewer taxa. We expect the OrthoMaM database to be useful for further resolving the phylogenetic tree of placental mammals and for better understanding the evolutionary dynamics of their genomes, i.e., the forces that shaped coding sequences in terms of selective constraints. BioMed Central 2007-11-30 /pmc/articles/PMC2249597/ /pubmed/18053139 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-241 Text en Copyright © 2007 Ranwez et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Database
Ranwez, Vincent
Delsuc, Frédéric
Ranwez, Sylvie
Belkhir, Khalid
Tilak, Marie-Ka
Douzery, Emmanuel JP
OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
title OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
title_full OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
title_fullStr OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
title_full_unstemmed OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
title_short OrthoMaM: A database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
title_sort orthomam: a database of orthologous genomic markers for placental mammal phylogenetics
topic Database
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2249597/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18053139
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-241
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