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Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes

Whole plastid genomes are being sequenced rapidly from across the green plant tree of life, and phylogenetic analyses of these are increasing resolution and support for relationships that have varied among or been unresolved in earlier single- and multi-gene studies. Pooideae, the cool-season grass...

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Autores principales: Saarela, Jeffery M., Wysocki, William P., Barrett, Craig F., Soreng, Robert J., Davis, Jerrold I., Clark, Lynn G., Kelchner, Scot A., Pires, J. Chris, Edger, Patrick P., Mayfield, Dustin R., Duvall, Melvin R.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4480051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25940204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plv046
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author Saarela, Jeffery M.
Wysocki, William P.
Barrett, Craig F.
Soreng, Robert J.
Davis, Jerrold I.
Clark, Lynn G.
Kelchner, Scot A.
Pires, J. Chris
Edger, Patrick P.
Mayfield, Dustin R.
Duvall, Melvin R.
author_facet Saarela, Jeffery M.
Wysocki, William P.
Barrett, Craig F.
Soreng, Robert J.
Davis, Jerrold I.
Clark, Lynn G.
Kelchner, Scot A.
Pires, J. Chris
Edger, Patrick P.
Mayfield, Dustin R.
Duvall, Melvin R.
author_sort Saarela, Jeffery M.
collection PubMed
description Whole plastid genomes are being sequenced rapidly from across the green plant tree of life, and phylogenetic analyses of these are increasing resolution and support for relationships that have varied among or been unresolved in earlier single- and multi-gene studies. Pooideae, the cool-season grass lineage, is the largest of the 12 grass subfamilies and includes important temperate cereals, turf grasses and forage species. Although numerous studies of the phylogeny of the subfamily have been undertaken, relationships among some ‘early-diverging’ tribes conflict among studies, and some relationships among subtribes of Poeae have not yet been resolved. To address these issues, we newly sequenced 25 whole plastomes, which showed rearrangements typical of Poaceae. These plastomes represent 9 tribes and 11 subtribes of Pooideae, and were analysed with 20 existing plastomes for the subfamily. Maximum likelihood (ML), maximum parsimony (MP) and Bayesian inference (BI) robustly resolve most deep relationships in the subfamily. Complete plastome data provide increased nodal support compared with protein-coding data alone at nodes that are not maximally supported. Following the divergence of Brachyelytrum, Phaenospermateae, Brylkinieae–Meliceae and Ampelodesmeae–Stipeae are the successive sister groups of the rest of the subfamily. Ampelodesmeae are nested within Stipeae in the plastome trees, consistent with its hybrid origin between a phaenospermatoid and a stipoid grass (the maternal parent). The core Pooideae are strongly supported and include Brachypodieae, a Bromeae–Triticeae clade and Poeae. Within Poeae, a novel sister group relationship between Phalaridinae and Torreyochloinae is found, and the relative branching order of this clade and Aveninae, with respect to an Agrostidinae–Brizinae clade, are discordant between MP and ML/BI trees. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses strongly support Airinae and Holcinae as the successive sister groups of a Dactylidinae–Loliinae clade.
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spelling pubmed-44800512015-06-26 Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes Saarela, Jeffery M. Wysocki, William P. Barrett, Craig F. Soreng, Robert J. Davis, Jerrold I. Clark, Lynn G. Kelchner, Scot A. Pires, J. Chris Edger, Patrick P. Mayfield, Dustin R. Duvall, Melvin R. AoB Plants Research Articles Whole plastid genomes are being sequenced rapidly from across the green plant tree of life, and phylogenetic analyses of these are increasing resolution and support for relationships that have varied among or been unresolved in earlier single- and multi-gene studies. Pooideae, the cool-season grass lineage, is the largest of the 12 grass subfamilies and includes important temperate cereals, turf grasses and forage species. Although numerous studies of the phylogeny of the subfamily have been undertaken, relationships among some ‘early-diverging’ tribes conflict among studies, and some relationships among subtribes of Poeae have not yet been resolved. To address these issues, we newly sequenced 25 whole plastomes, which showed rearrangements typical of Poaceae. These plastomes represent 9 tribes and 11 subtribes of Pooideae, and were analysed with 20 existing plastomes for the subfamily. Maximum likelihood (ML), maximum parsimony (MP) and Bayesian inference (BI) robustly resolve most deep relationships in the subfamily. Complete plastome data provide increased nodal support compared with protein-coding data alone at nodes that are not maximally supported. Following the divergence of Brachyelytrum, Phaenospermateae, Brylkinieae–Meliceae and Ampelodesmeae–Stipeae are the successive sister groups of the rest of the subfamily. Ampelodesmeae are nested within Stipeae in the plastome trees, consistent with its hybrid origin between a phaenospermatoid and a stipoid grass (the maternal parent). The core Pooideae are strongly supported and include Brachypodieae, a Bromeae–Triticeae clade and Poeae. Within Poeae, a novel sister group relationship between Phalaridinae and Torreyochloinae is found, and the relative branching order of this clade and Aveninae, with respect to an Agrostidinae–Brizinae clade, are discordant between MP and ML/BI trees. Maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses strongly support Airinae and Holcinae as the successive sister groups of a Dactylidinae–Loliinae clade. Oxford University Press 2015-05-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4480051/ /pubmed/25940204 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plv046 Text en Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Annals of Botany Company. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/), which permits unrestricted reuse, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Articles
Saarela, Jeffery M.
Wysocki, William P.
Barrett, Craig F.
Soreng, Robert J.
Davis, Jerrold I.
Clark, Lynn G.
Kelchner, Scot A.
Pires, J. Chris
Edger, Patrick P.
Mayfield, Dustin R.
Duvall, Melvin R.
Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
title Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
title_full Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
title_fullStr Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
title_full_unstemmed Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
title_short Plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
title_sort plastid phylogenomics of the cool-season grass subfamily: clarification of relationships among early-diverging tribes
topic Research Articles
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4480051/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25940204
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/aobpla/plv046
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