| Literature DB >> 18651942 |
Yoichiro Azuma1, Yoshinori Kumazawa, Masaki Miya, Kohji Mabuchi, Mutsumi Nishida.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Recent advances in DNA sequencing and computation offer the opportunity for reliable estimates of divergence times between organisms based on molecular data. Bayesian estimations of divergence times that do not assume the molecular clock use time constraints at multiple nodes, usually based on the fossil records, as major boundary conditions. However, the fossil records of bony fishes may not adequately provide effective time constraints at multiple nodes. We explored an alternative source of time constraints in teleostean phylogeny by evaluating a biogeographic hypothesis concerning freshwater fishes from the family Cichlidae (Perciformes: Labroidei).Entities:
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Year: 2008 PMID: 18651942 PMCID: PMC2496912 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-8-215
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Evol Biol ISSN: 1471-2148 Impact factor: 3.260
Cichlid taxa analyzed for mtDNAs
| Distribution | Name | mtDNA size (bp) | Accession No. | Reference |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Africa | 16876* | AP009509 | this study | |
| 16598 | AP006015 | [ | ||
| 16626 | AP009126 | [ | ||
| 16587 | AP006014 | [ | ||
| South America | 16569 | AP009127 | [ | |
| 16544 | AP009506 | this study | ||
| Madagascar | 16543 | AP009508 | this study | |
| 16486 | AP009504 | this study | ||
| 16556 | AP009507 | this study | ||
| Indo/Sri Lanka | 16457 | AP009505 | this study |
*Nearly complete mtDNA sequences with the control region partially sequenced
Maximum (U) and minimum (L) time constrains (MYA) used for dating at nodes in Fig. 2
| Node | Constraint | Reference information |
|---|---|---|
| A | L416 | |
| A | U528 | Probable divergence time between chondrichthyans and osteichthyans (528 MYA), based on both fossils and molecules [ |
| B | L392 | Stem-actinopterans known from the Givetian/Eifelian boundary [ |
| B | U450 | Probable divergence time between sarcopterygians and actinopterygians (450 MYA), based on both fossils and molecules [ |
| C | L345 | Tournasian |
| C | U392 | Estimated divergence time between polypterids and actinopterans [ |
| D | L130 | |
| E | L284 | |
| F | L136 | Stem-hiodontid |
| G | L112 | Osteoglossoid fossil from the Aptian (Cretaceous) [ |
| H | L151 | Stem-elopomorph |
| I | L90 | Albuloid fossil from the Cenomanian (Cretaceous) [ |
| J | L50 | Anguillid and congrid fossils from the Ypresian (Tertiary) [ |
| K | L146 | Stem-ostariophysan |
| L | L57 | Clupeid fossil from the Thanetian (Tertiary) [ |
| M | L50 | Cyprinid fossil from the Ypresian (Tertiary) [ |
| N | L74 | Esociform fossil from the Campanian (Cretaceous) [ |
| O | L94 | Polymixiid fossil from the Cenomanian (Cretaceous) [ |
| P | L50 | Pleuronectiform fossil from the Ypresian (Tertiary) [ |
| Q | L98 | Tetraodontiform fossil from the Cenomanian (Cretaceous) [ |
| R | L32 | Estimated divergence time between |
Figure 1A Bayesian tree based on mitogenomic DNA sequences. This is a 50% majority rule consensus tree among 10,000 pooled trees from two independent Bayesian MCMC runs. The data set comprises aligned gap-free nucleotide sequences of 10,034-bp length from 54 taxa, which included 4,887 variable sites and 3,936 parsimony-informative sites. Partitioned Bayesian analyses were conducted using the GTR + I + Γ model and with all model parameters variable and unlinked across partitions. The numerals at internal nodes or branches indicate Bayesian posterior probabilities (left) and maximum likelihood bootstrap probability values (right) from 1000 replicates, respectively (shown as percentage for values above 50%).
Comparison of divergence time estimates between different time constraints and studies
| Divergence | This study1 | This study2 | This study3 | Yamanoue et al. [ | Inoue et al. [ |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cichlidae vs. Pomacentridae | 127 (107 – 149) | 144 (134 – 154) | 137 (115 – 160) | - | - |
| 70 (55 – 86) | 78 (65 – 93) | 76 (60 – 94) | 73 (57 – 94) | - | |
| Tetraodontidae vs. | 154 (131 – 177) | 170 (156 – 185) | 161 (137 – 185) | 192 (153 – 235) | - |
| Cichlidae vs. | 136 (115 – 159) | 152 (141 – 165) | 148 (125 – 171) | - | - |
| Cichlidae/ | 159 (136 – 183) | 176 (163 – 191) | 166 (142 – 191) | 184 (154 – 221) | - |
| Percomorpha vs. Beryciformes | 182 (157 – 206) | 198 (183 – 215) | 188 (162 – 214) | 206 (174 – 245) | - |
| Acanthopterygii vs. Gadiformes | 191 (166 – 216) | 207 (190 – 224) | 202 (176 – 229) | 223 (191 – 264) | - |
| Acanthomorpha vs. Protacanthopterygii | 249 (223 – 274) | 262 (243 – 281) | 270 (243 – 294) | 280 (240 – 326) | 232 (197 – 267) |
| 139 (111 – 169) | 147 (120 – 174) | 135 (107 – 164) | 167 (131 – 208) | - | |
| Euteleostei vs. Otocephala | 276 (250 – 301) | 288 (268 – 307) | 291 (264 – 314) | 315 (270 – 363) | 278 (241 – 314) |
| Teleostei vs. Amiiformes | 360 (339 – 376) | 365 (348 – 378) | 381 (363 – 392) | 390 (340 – 442) | 376 (337 – 413) |
| Sarcopterygii vs. Actinopterygii | 428 (417 – 448) | 429 (417 – 449) | 428 (417 – 449) | 470 (415 – 524) | 451 (413 – 495) |
The means and 95% credibility ranges (in parentheses) are shown for estimated divergence times.
1 Without biogeography-based time constraints on cichlid divergences (see Fig. 2).
2 With biogeography-based time constraints on cichlid divergences (see Fig. 4).
3 Without biogeography-based time constraints on cichlid divergences, but assuming the Ancient Fish Clade (see text).
Test of alternative phylogenetic hypotheses for continental cichlid groups
| Topological constraint | pKH | pSH | 2 ln Bayes factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Best as in Fig. 1 | 1.000 | 1.000 | |
| Constraint 1: monophyly of Madagascar and Indo/Sri Lanka (Tree 1) | 0.006** | 0.043* | 65.4* |
| Constraint 2: monophyly of Africa, Madagascar and Indo/Sri Lanka (Tree 2) | 0.001** | 0.002** | 125.1* |
| Constraint 3: monophyly of Africa and Indo/Sri Lanka (Tree 3) | 0.000** | 0.000** | 297.2* |
Probabilities for constrained trees were assessed using the Kishino-Hasegawa (pKH) and Shimodaira-Hasegawa (pSH) tests and the Bayes factor. Single asterisks indicate significant rejection (p < 0.05) and double asterisks indicate highly significant rejection (p < 0.01) of the corresponding hypothesis. We used the traditional criterion of 2 ln Bayes factor over 10 (with an asterisk), indicating very strong evidence against an alternative hypothesis [39]. Constrained trees are the following: Tree 1: ((((Oreochromis sp., (Tropheus duboisi, Neolamprologus brichardi)), Tylochromis polylepis),(Astronotus ocellatus, Hypselecara temporalis)),((Etroplus maculatus, Paretroplus maculatus),(Ptychochromoides katria, Paratilapia polleni))); Tree 2: ((((Oreochromis sp.,(Tropheus duboisi, Neolamprologus brichardi)), Tylochromis polylepis),((Etroplus maculatus, Paretroplus maculatus),(Ptychochromoides katria, Paratilapia polleni))),(Astronotus ocellatus, Hypselecara temporalis)); and Tree 3: (((((Oreochromis sp.,(Tropheus duboisi, Neolamprologus brichardi)), Tylochromis polylepis), Etroplus maculatus),((Astronotus ocellatus, Hypselecara temporalis),(Ptychochromoides katria, Paratilapia polleni))), Paretroplus maculatus).
Figure 2Divergence times estimated from the partitioned Bayesian analysis. A posterior distribution of divergence times with 95% credibility intervals (shaded rectangles) was obtained using mitogenomic DNA sequences (10,034 sites). Two sharks (Scyliorhinus canicula and Mustelus manazo) were used as an outgroup (not shown). The multidistribute program [41] was used to estimate divergence times assuming the tree topology shown in Fig. 1. Letters indicate nodes at which maximum and/or minimum time constraints were set (see Table 2 for details of the individual constraints). Paleogeographical maps at 148 MYA, 120 MYA, 95 MYA, and 85 MYA [50] are shown. Dark-gray areas on the maps represent those being fragmented within Gondwanaland at those times.
Figure 3Comparison of paleontological and molecular estimates of divergence times. Minimum estimates of divergence times deducible from fossil records (see Table 2) were plotted as closed circles against molecularly estimated divergence times (mean values for the divergence times shown in Fig. 2). Closed triangles show plots of the timing of continental breakups against the molecular time estimates of cichlid divergences between the corresponding continents (data taken from Fig. 2). The timings used for complete continental breakups are 112 MYA for (Africa + South America) vs. (Madagascar + Indo/Sri Lanka), 100 MYA for Africa vs. South America, and 85 MYA for Madagascar vs. Indo/Sri Lanka [50-52]. The solid line indicates a 1:1 relationship between paleontological and molecular time estimates.
Figure 4Divergence times estimated from the partitioned Bayesian analysis using both paleontological time constraints (Table 2) and biogeographical assumptions for the divergences of continental cichlid groups. The added time constraints on cichlid divergences are as follows: 112 MYA (lower) and 145 MYA (upper) for (Africa + South America) vs. (Madagascar + Indo/Sri Lanka); 100 MYA (lower) and 120 MYA (upper) for Africa vs. South America; and 85 MYA (lower) and 95 MYA (upper) for Madagascar vs. Indo/Sri Lanka [50-52]. See Fig. 2 legend for other details.