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Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes

BACKGROUND: The Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) are a highly diverse clade of angiosperms found mostly in the Northern Hemisphere, with the highest diversity in temperate areas of the Old World. Chloroplast markers have greatly improved our understanding of this clade but many relationships remain un...

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Autores principales: Crowl, Andrew A., Mavrodiev, Evgeny, Mansion, Guilhem, Haberle, Rosemarie, Pistarino, Annalaura, Kamari, Georgia, Phitos, Dimitrios, Borsch, Thomas, Cellinese, Nico
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3981779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24718519
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094199
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author Crowl, Andrew A.
Mavrodiev, Evgeny
Mansion, Guilhem
Haberle, Rosemarie
Pistarino, Annalaura
Kamari, Georgia
Phitos, Dimitrios
Borsch, Thomas
Cellinese, Nico
author_facet Crowl, Andrew A.
Mavrodiev, Evgeny
Mansion, Guilhem
Haberle, Rosemarie
Pistarino, Annalaura
Kamari, Georgia
Phitos, Dimitrios
Borsch, Thomas
Cellinese, Nico
author_sort Crowl, Andrew A.
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) are a highly diverse clade of angiosperms found mostly in the Northern Hemisphere, with the highest diversity in temperate areas of the Old World. Chloroplast markers have greatly improved our understanding of this clade but many relationships remain unclear primarily due to low levels of molecular evolution and recent and rapid divergence. Furthermore, focusing solely on maternally inherited markers such as those from the chloroplast genome may obscure processes such as hybridization. In this study we explore the phylogenetic utility of two low-copy nuclear loci from the pentatricopeptide repeat gene family (PPR). Rapidly evolving nuclear loci may provide increased phylogenetic resolution in clades containing recently diverged or closely related taxa. We present results based on both chloroplast and low-copy nuclear loci and discuss the utility of such markers to resolve evolutionary relationships and infer hybridization events within the Campanuloideae clade. RESULTS: The inclusion of low-copy nuclear genes into the analyses provides increased phylogenetic resolution in two species-rich clades containing recently diverged taxa. We also obtain support for the placement of two early diverging lineages (Jasione and Musschia-Gadellia clades) that have previously been unresolved. Furthermore, phylogenetic analyses of PPR loci revealed potential hybridization events for a number of taxa (e.g., Campanula pelviformis and Legousia species). These loci offer greater overall topological support than obtained with plastid DNA alone. CONCLUSION: This study represents the first inclusion of low-copy nuclear genes for phylogenetic reconstruction in Campanuloideae. The two PPR loci were easy to sequence, required no cloning, and the sequence alignments were straightforward across the entire Campanuloideae clade. Although potentially complicated by incomplete lineage sorting, these markers proved useful for understanding the processes of reticulate evolution and resolving relationships at a wide range of phylogenetic levels. Our results stress the importance of including multiple, independent loci in phylogenetic analyses.
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spelling pubmed-39817792014-04-11 Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes Crowl, Andrew A. Mavrodiev, Evgeny Mansion, Guilhem Haberle, Rosemarie Pistarino, Annalaura Kamari, Georgia Phitos, Dimitrios Borsch, Thomas Cellinese, Nico PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) are a highly diverse clade of angiosperms found mostly in the Northern Hemisphere, with the highest diversity in temperate areas of the Old World. Chloroplast markers have greatly improved our understanding of this clade but many relationships remain unclear primarily due to low levels of molecular evolution and recent and rapid divergence. Furthermore, focusing solely on maternally inherited markers such as those from the chloroplast genome may obscure processes such as hybridization. In this study we explore the phylogenetic utility of two low-copy nuclear loci from the pentatricopeptide repeat gene family (PPR). Rapidly evolving nuclear loci may provide increased phylogenetic resolution in clades containing recently diverged or closely related taxa. We present results based on both chloroplast and low-copy nuclear loci and discuss the utility of such markers to resolve evolutionary relationships and infer hybridization events within the Campanuloideae clade. RESULTS: The inclusion of low-copy nuclear genes into the analyses provides increased phylogenetic resolution in two species-rich clades containing recently diverged taxa. We also obtain support for the placement of two early diverging lineages (Jasione and Musschia-Gadellia clades) that have previously been unresolved. Furthermore, phylogenetic analyses of PPR loci revealed potential hybridization events for a number of taxa (e.g., Campanula pelviformis and Legousia species). These loci offer greater overall topological support than obtained with plastid DNA alone. CONCLUSION: This study represents the first inclusion of low-copy nuclear genes for phylogenetic reconstruction in Campanuloideae. The two PPR loci were easy to sequence, required no cloning, and the sequence alignments were straightforward across the entire Campanuloideae clade. Although potentially complicated by incomplete lineage sorting, these markers proved useful for understanding the processes of reticulate evolution and resolving relationships at a wide range of phylogenetic levels. Our results stress the importance of including multiple, independent loci in phylogenetic analyses. Public Library of Science 2014-04-09 /pmc/articles/PMC3981779/ /pubmed/24718519 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094199 Text en © 2014 Crowl 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
Crowl, Andrew A.
Mavrodiev, Evgeny
Mansion, Guilhem
Haberle, Rosemarie
Pistarino, Annalaura
Kamari, Georgia
Phitos, Dimitrios
Borsch, Thomas
Cellinese, Nico
Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes
title Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes
title_full Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes
title_fullStr Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes
title_full_unstemmed Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes
title_short Phylogeny of Campanuloideae (Campanulaceae) with Emphasis on the Utility of Nuclear Pentatricopeptide Repeat (PPR) Genes
title_sort phylogeny of campanuloideae (campanulaceae) with emphasis on the utility of nuclear pentatricopeptide repeat (ppr) genes
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3981779/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24718519
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0094199
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