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The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea

With the increased availability of genome sequences for bacteria, it has become routine practice to construct genome-based phylogenies. These phylogenies have formed the basis for various taxonomic decisions, especially for resolving problematic relationships between taxa. Despite the popularity of...

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Autores principales: Palmer, Marike, Venter, Stephanus N., McTaggart, Alistair R., Coetzee, Martin P.A., Van Wyk, Stephanie, Avontuur, Juanita R., Beukes, Chrizelle W., Fourie, Gerda, Santana, Quentin C., Van Der Nest, Magriet A., Blom, Jochen, Steenkamp, Emma T.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: PeerJ Inc. 2019
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6474361/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31024760
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6698
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author Palmer, Marike
Venter, Stephanus N.
McTaggart, Alistair R.
Coetzee, Martin P.A.
Van Wyk, Stephanie
Avontuur, Juanita R.
Beukes, Chrizelle W.
Fourie, Gerda
Santana, Quentin C.
Van Der Nest, Magriet A.
Blom, Jochen
Steenkamp, Emma T.
author_facet Palmer, Marike
Venter, Stephanus N.
McTaggart, Alistair R.
Coetzee, Martin P.A.
Van Wyk, Stephanie
Avontuur, Juanita R.
Beukes, Chrizelle W.
Fourie, Gerda
Santana, Quentin C.
Van Der Nest, Magriet A.
Blom, Jochen
Steenkamp, Emma T.
author_sort Palmer, Marike
collection PubMed
description With the increased availability of genome sequences for bacteria, it has become routine practice to construct genome-based phylogenies. These phylogenies have formed the basis for various taxonomic decisions, especially for resolving problematic relationships between taxa. Despite the popularity of concatenating shared genes to obtain well-supported phylogenies, various issues regarding this combined-evidence approach have been raised. These include the introduction of phylogenetic error into datasets, as well as incongruence due to organism-level evolutionary processes, particularly horizontal gene transfer and incomplete lineage sorting. Because of the huge effect that this could have on phylogenies, we evaluated the impact of phylogenetic conflict caused by organism-level evolutionary processes on the established species phylogeny for Pantoea, a member of the Enterobacterales. We explored the presence and distribution of phylogenetic conflict at the gene partition and nucleotide levels, by identifying putative inter-lineage recombination events that might have contributed to such conflict. Furthermore, we determined whether smaller, randomly constructed datasets had sufficient signal to reconstruct the current species tree hypothesis or if they would be overshadowed by phylogenetic incongruence. We found that no individual gene tree was fully congruent with the species phylogeny of Pantoea, although many of the expected nodes were supported by various individual genes across the genome. Evidence of recombination was found across all lineages within Pantoea, and provides support for organism-level evolutionary processes as a potential source of phylogenetic conflict. The phylogenetic signal from at least 70 random genes recovered robust, well-supported phylogenies for the backbone and most species relationships of Pantoea, and was unaffected by phylogenetic conflict within the dataset. Furthermore, despite providing limited resolution among taxa at the level of single gene trees, concatenated analyses of genes that were identified as having no signal resulted in a phylogeny that resembled the species phylogeny of Pantoea. This distribution of signal and noise across the genome presents the ideal situation for phylogenetic inference, as the topology from a ≥70-gene concatenated species phylogeny is not driven by single genes, and our data suggests that this finding may also hold true for smaller datasets. We thus argue that, by using a concatenation-based approach in phylogenomics, one can obtain robust phylogenies due to the synergistic effect of the combined signal obtained from multiple genes.
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spelling pubmed-64743612019-04-25 The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea Palmer, Marike Venter, Stephanus N. McTaggart, Alistair R. Coetzee, Martin P.A. Van Wyk, Stephanie Avontuur, Juanita R. Beukes, Chrizelle W. Fourie, Gerda Santana, Quentin C. Van Der Nest, Magriet A. Blom, Jochen Steenkamp, Emma T. PeerJ Bioinformatics With the increased availability of genome sequences for bacteria, it has become routine practice to construct genome-based phylogenies. These phylogenies have formed the basis for various taxonomic decisions, especially for resolving problematic relationships between taxa. Despite the popularity of concatenating shared genes to obtain well-supported phylogenies, various issues regarding this combined-evidence approach have been raised. These include the introduction of phylogenetic error into datasets, as well as incongruence due to organism-level evolutionary processes, particularly horizontal gene transfer and incomplete lineage sorting. Because of the huge effect that this could have on phylogenies, we evaluated the impact of phylogenetic conflict caused by organism-level evolutionary processes on the established species phylogeny for Pantoea, a member of the Enterobacterales. We explored the presence and distribution of phylogenetic conflict at the gene partition and nucleotide levels, by identifying putative inter-lineage recombination events that might have contributed to such conflict. Furthermore, we determined whether smaller, randomly constructed datasets had sufficient signal to reconstruct the current species tree hypothesis or if they would be overshadowed by phylogenetic incongruence. We found that no individual gene tree was fully congruent with the species phylogeny of Pantoea, although many of the expected nodes were supported by various individual genes across the genome. Evidence of recombination was found across all lineages within Pantoea, and provides support for organism-level evolutionary processes as a potential source of phylogenetic conflict. The phylogenetic signal from at least 70 random genes recovered robust, well-supported phylogenies for the backbone and most species relationships of Pantoea, and was unaffected by phylogenetic conflict within the dataset. Furthermore, despite providing limited resolution among taxa at the level of single gene trees, concatenated analyses of genes that were identified as having no signal resulted in a phylogeny that resembled the species phylogeny of Pantoea. This distribution of signal and noise across the genome presents the ideal situation for phylogenetic inference, as the topology from a ≥70-gene concatenated species phylogeny is not driven by single genes, and our data suggests that this finding may also hold true for smaller datasets. We thus argue that, by using a concatenation-based approach in phylogenomics, one can obtain robust phylogenies due to the synergistic effect of the combined signal obtained from multiple genes. PeerJ Inc. 2019-04-16 /pmc/articles/PMC6474361/ /pubmed/31024760 http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6698 Text en ©2019 Palmer 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 (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, reproduction and adaptation in any medium and for any purpose provided that it is properly attributed. For attribution, the original author(s), title, publication source (PeerJ) and either DOI or URL of the article must be cited.
spellingShingle Bioinformatics
Palmer, Marike
Venter, Stephanus N.
McTaggart, Alistair R.
Coetzee, Martin P.A.
Van Wyk, Stephanie
Avontuur, Juanita R.
Beukes, Chrizelle W.
Fourie, Gerda
Santana, Quentin C.
Van Der Nest, Magriet A.
Blom, Jochen
Steenkamp, Emma T.
The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea
title The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea
title_full The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea
title_fullStr The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea
title_full_unstemmed The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea
title_short The synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in Pantoea
title_sort synergistic effect of concatenation in phylogenomics: the case in pantoea
topic Bioinformatics
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6474361/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/31024760
http://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.6698
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