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Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles

The phylogenetic position of turtles within the vertebrate tree of life remains controversial. Conflicting conclusions from different studies are likely a consequence of systematic error in the tree construction process, rather than random error from small amounts of data. Using genomic data, we eva...

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Autores principales: Lu, Bin, Yang, Weizhao, Dai, Qiang, Fu, Jinzhong
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3836853/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24278129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079348
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author Lu, Bin
Yang, Weizhao
Dai, Qiang
Fu, Jinzhong
author_facet Lu, Bin
Yang, Weizhao
Dai, Qiang
Fu, Jinzhong
author_sort Lu, Bin
collection PubMed
description The phylogenetic position of turtles within the vertebrate tree of life remains controversial. Conflicting conclusions from different studies are likely a consequence of systematic error in the tree construction process, rather than random error from small amounts of data. Using genomic data, we evaluate the phylogenetic position of turtles with both conventional concatenated data analysis and a “genes as characters” approach. Two datasets were constructed, one with seven species (human, opossum, zebra finch, chicken, green anole, Chinese pond turtle, and western clawed frog) and 4584 orthologous genes, and the second with four additional species (soft-shelled turtle, Nile crocodile, royal python, and tuatara) but only 1638 genes. Our concatenated data analysis strongly supported turtle as the sister-group to archosaurs (the archosaur hypothesis), similar to several recent genomic data based studies using similar methods. When using genes as characters and gene trees as character-state trees with equal weighting for each gene, however, our parsimony analysis suggested that turtles are possibly sister-group to diapsids, archosaurs, or lepidosaurs. None of these resolutions were strongly supported by bootstraps. Furthermore, our incongruence analysis clearly demonstrated that there is a large amount of inconsistency among genes and most of the conflict relates to the placement of turtles. We conclude that the uncertain placement of turtles is a reflection of the true state of nature. Concatenated data analysis of large and heterogeneous datasets likely suffers from systematic error and over-estimates of confidence as a consequence of a large number of characters. Using genes as characters offers an alternative for phylogenomic analysis. It has potential to reduce systematic error, such as data heterogeneity and long-branch attraction, and it can also avoid problems associated with computation time and model selection. Finally, treating genes as characters provides a convenient method for examining gene and genome evolution.
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spelling pubmed-38368532013-11-25 Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles Lu, Bin Yang, Weizhao Dai, Qiang Fu, Jinzhong PLoS One Research Article The phylogenetic position of turtles within the vertebrate tree of life remains controversial. Conflicting conclusions from different studies are likely a consequence of systematic error in the tree construction process, rather than random error from small amounts of data. Using genomic data, we evaluate the phylogenetic position of turtles with both conventional concatenated data analysis and a “genes as characters” approach. Two datasets were constructed, one with seven species (human, opossum, zebra finch, chicken, green anole, Chinese pond turtle, and western clawed frog) and 4584 orthologous genes, and the second with four additional species (soft-shelled turtle, Nile crocodile, royal python, and tuatara) but only 1638 genes. Our concatenated data analysis strongly supported turtle as the sister-group to archosaurs (the archosaur hypothesis), similar to several recent genomic data based studies using similar methods. When using genes as characters and gene trees as character-state trees with equal weighting for each gene, however, our parsimony analysis suggested that turtles are possibly sister-group to diapsids, archosaurs, or lepidosaurs. None of these resolutions were strongly supported by bootstraps. Furthermore, our incongruence analysis clearly demonstrated that there is a large amount of inconsistency among genes and most of the conflict relates to the placement of turtles. We conclude that the uncertain placement of turtles is a reflection of the true state of nature. Concatenated data analysis of large and heterogeneous datasets likely suffers from systematic error and over-estimates of confidence as a consequence of a large number of characters. Using genes as characters offers an alternative for phylogenomic analysis. It has potential to reduce systematic error, such as data heterogeneity and long-branch attraction, and it can also avoid problems associated with computation time and model selection. Finally, treating genes as characters provides a convenient method for examining gene and genome evolution. Public Library of Science 2013-11-21 /pmc/articles/PMC3836853/ /pubmed/24278129 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079348 Text en © 2013 Lu et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Lu, Bin
Yang, Weizhao
Dai, Qiang
Fu, Jinzhong
Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles
title Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles
title_full Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles
title_fullStr Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles
title_full_unstemmed Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles
title_short Using Genes as Characters and a Parsimony Analysis to Explore the Phylogenetic Position of Turtles
title_sort using genes as characters and a parsimony analysis to explore the phylogenetic position of turtles
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3836853/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24278129
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0079348
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