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Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing

Many phylogenomic studies based on transcriptomes have been limited to “single-copy” genes due to methodological challenges in homology and orthology inferences. Only a relatively small number of studies have explored analyses beyond reconstructing species relationships. We sampled 69 transcriptomes...

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Autores principales: Yang, Ya, Moore, Michael J., Brockington, Samuel F., Soltis, Douglas E., Wong, Gane Ka-Shu, Carpenter, Eric J., Zhang, Yong, Chen, Li, Yan, Zhixiang, Xie, Yinlong, Sage, Rowan F., Covshoff, Sarah, Hibberd, Julian M., Nelson, Matthew N., Smith, Stephen A.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Oxford University Press 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25837578
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv081
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author Yang, Ya
Moore, Michael J.
Brockington, Samuel F.
Soltis, Douglas E.
Wong, Gane Ka-Shu
Carpenter, Eric J.
Zhang, Yong
Chen, Li
Yan, Zhixiang
Xie, Yinlong
Sage, Rowan F.
Covshoff, Sarah
Hibberd, Julian M.
Nelson, Matthew N.
Smith, Stephen A.
author_facet Yang, Ya
Moore, Michael J.
Brockington, Samuel F.
Soltis, Douglas E.
Wong, Gane Ka-Shu
Carpenter, Eric J.
Zhang, Yong
Chen, Li
Yan, Zhixiang
Xie, Yinlong
Sage, Rowan F.
Covshoff, Sarah
Hibberd, Julian M.
Nelson, Matthew N.
Smith, Stephen A.
author_sort Yang, Ya
collection PubMed
description Many phylogenomic studies based on transcriptomes have been limited to “single-copy” genes due to methodological challenges in homology and orthology inferences. Only a relatively small number of studies have explored analyses beyond reconstructing species relationships. We sampled 69 transcriptomes in the hyperdiverse plant clade Caryophyllales and 27 outgroups from annotated genomes across eudicots. Using a combined similarity- and phylogenetic tree-based approach, we recovered 10,960 homolog groups, where each was represented by at least eight ingroup taxa. By decomposing these homolog trees, and taking gene duplications into account, we obtained 17,273 ortholog groups, where each was represented by at least ten ingroup taxa. We reconstructed the species phylogeny using a 1,122-gene data set with a gene occupancy of 92.1%. From the homolog trees, we found that both synonymous and nonsynonymous substitution rates in herbaceous lineages are up to three times as fast as in their woody relatives. This is the first time such a pattern has been shown across thousands of nuclear genes with dense taxon sampling. We also pinpointed regions of the Caryophyllales tree that were characterized by relatively high frequencies of gene duplication, including three previously unrecognized whole-genome duplications. By further combining information from homolog tree topology and synonymous distance between paralog pairs, phylogenetic locations for 13 putative genome duplication events were identified. Genes that experienced the greatest gene family expansion were concentrated among those involved in signal transduction and oxidoreduction, including a cytochrome P450 gene that encodes a key enzyme in the betalain synthesis pathway. Our approach demonstrates a new approach for functional phylogenomic analysis in nonmodel species that is based on homolog groups in addition to inferred ortholog groups.
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spelling pubmed-48330682016-04-20 Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing Yang, Ya Moore, Michael J. Brockington, Samuel F. Soltis, Douglas E. Wong, Gane Ka-Shu Carpenter, Eric J. Zhang, Yong Chen, Li Yan, Zhixiang Xie, Yinlong Sage, Rowan F. Covshoff, Sarah Hibberd, Julian M. Nelson, Matthew N. Smith, Stephen A. Mol Biol Evol Discoveries Many phylogenomic studies based on transcriptomes have been limited to “single-copy” genes due to methodological challenges in homology and orthology inferences. Only a relatively small number of studies have explored analyses beyond reconstructing species relationships. We sampled 69 transcriptomes in the hyperdiverse plant clade Caryophyllales and 27 outgroups from annotated genomes across eudicots. Using a combined similarity- and phylogenetic tree-based approach, we recovered 10,960 homolog groups, where each was represented by at least eight ingroup taxa. By decomposing these homolog trees, and taking gene duplications into account, we obtained 17,273 ortholog groups, where each was represented by at least ten ingroup taxa. We reconstructed the species phylogeny using a 1,122-gene data set with a gene occupancy of 92.1%. From the homolog trees, we found that both synonymous and nonsynonymous substitution rates in herbaceous lineages are up to three times as fast as in their woody relatives. This is the first time such a pattern has been shown across thousands of nuclear genes with dense taxon sampling. We also pinpointed regions of the Caryophyllales tree that were characterized by relatively high frequencies of gene duplication, including three previously unrecognized whole-genome duplications. By further combining information from homolog tree topology and synonymous distance between paralog pairs, phylogenetic locations for 13 putative genome duplication events were identified. Genes that experienced the greatest gene family expansion were concentrated among those involved in signal transduction and oxidoreduction, including a cytochrome P450 gene that encodes a key enzyme in the betalain synthesis pathway. Our approach demonstrates a new approach for functional phylogenomic analysis in nonmodel species that is based on homolog groups in addition to inferred ortholog groups. Oxford University Press 2015-08 2015-04-02 /pmc/articles/PMC4833068/ /pubmed/25837578 http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv081 Text en © The Author 2015. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution. 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 Discoveries
Yang, Ya
Moore, Michael J.
Brockington, Samuel F.
Soltis, Douglas E.
Wong, Gane Ka-Shu
Carpenter, Eric J.
Zhang, Yong
Chen, Li
Yan, Zhixiang
Xie, Yinlong
Sage, Rowan F.
Covshoff, Sarah
Hibberd, Julian M.
Nelson, Matthew N.
Smith, Stephen A.
Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing
title Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing
title_full Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing
title_fullStr Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing
title_full_unstemmed Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing
title_short Dissecting Molecular Evolution in the Highly Diverse Plant Clade Caryophyllales Using Transcriptome Sequencing
title_sort dissecting molecular evolution in the highly diverse plant clade caryophyllales using transcriptome sequencing
topic Discoveries
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4833068/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/25837578
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv081
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