| Literature DB >> 24302986 |
Abstract
The grass tribe Triticeae (=Hordeeae) comprises only about 300 species, but it is well known for the economically important crop plants wheat, barley, and rye. The group is also recognized as a fascinating example of evolutionary complexity, with a history shaped by numerous events of auto- and allopolyploidy and apparent introgression involving diploids and polyploids. The genus Elymus comprises a heterogeneous collection of allopolyploid genome combinations, all of which include at least one set of homoeologs, designated St, derived from Pseudoroegneria. The current analysis includes a geographically and genomically diverse collection of 21 tetraploid Elymus species, and a single hexaploid species. Diploid and polyploid relationships were estimated using four molecular data sets, including one that combines two regions of the chloroplast genome, and three from unlinked nuclear genes: phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase, β-amylase, and granule-bound starch synthase I. Four gene trees were generated using maximum likelihood, and the phylogenetic placement of the polyploid sequences reveals extensive reticulation beyond allopolyploidy alone. The trees were interpreted with reference to numerous phenomena known to complicate allopolyploid phylogenies, and introgression was identified as a major factor in their history. The work illustrates the interpretation of complicated phylogenetic results through the sequential consideration of numerous possible explanations, and the results highlight the value of careful inspection of multiple independent molecular phylogenetic estimates, with particular focus on the differences among them.Entities:
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Year: 2013 PMID: 24302986 PMCID: PMC3840256 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0078449
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Figure 1Evolutionary scenarios.
Four scenarios representing separate (a) or partially sequential (b–d) origins of the four provisional categories of polyploids: StStHH tetraploids native to North American (blue) and Eurasia (red), Asian StStYY tetraploids (green), and E. repens hexaploids (purple). Additional scenarios are conceivable, including recurrent origins of each group.
Figure 2Chloroplast DNA gene tree.
The data set (Dataset S1) was partitioned by genome region for a priori model specification in jModelTest, and simultaneous parameter estimation in GARLI: the trnT-trnL-trnF region (GTR+Γ) and the rpoA gene (GTR+Γ). This represents the best tree from 50 GARLI search replicates. ML bootstrap results are based 100 GARLI replicates under the same models as used in the tree searches. Monogenomic representatives of the tribe are in black font; Elymus representatives are in colored, boldface font. Colors distinguish the four hypothetical Elymus species groups as described in the text: North American (blue) and Eurasian (red) StStHH tetraploids, Asian StStYY tetraploids (green), and E. repens hexaploids (purple).
Figure 5Granule-bound starch synthase I gene tree.
The data set (Dataset S4) was partitioned for a priori model specification in jModelTest, and simultaneous parameter estimation in GARLI: exons (GTR+Γ) and introns (GTR+Γ). This represents the best tree from 50 GARLI search replicates. ML bootstrap results are based 100 GARLI replicates under the same models as used in the tree searches. Font colors follow Figure 2.
Figure 3Phosphoenolpyruvate carboxylase gene tree.
The data set (Dataset S2) was treated as a single partition for a priori model specification in jModelTest (HKY+Γ), and simultaneous parameter estimation in GARLI. This represents the best tree from 50 GARLI search replicates. ML bootstrap results are based 100 GARLI replicates under the same models as used in the tree searches. Font colors follow Figure 2.
Figure 4Beta amylase gene tree.
The data set (Dataset S3) was partitioned for a priori model specification in jModelTest, and simultaneous parameter estimation in GARLI: exons (K80+Γ) and introns (GTR+I+Γ). This represents the best tree from 50 GARLI search replicates. ML bootstrap results are based 100 GARLI replicates under the same models as used in the tree searches. Font colors follow Figure 2.
Figure 6Granule-bound starch synthase I exon tree: Pooids and Bambusoids.
The data set (Dataset S5) was treated as a single partition for a priori model specification in jModelTest (GTR+I+Γ), and simultaneous parameter estimation in GARLI. ML bootstrap results are based 100 GARLI replicates under the same model. The Triticeae clade represents a small subset of the individuals in the full GBSSI tree (Figure 5). Elymus repens sequences are highlighted in purple, boldface font.
Figure 7Summary of Elymus genetic diversity.
The black trees represent diploid phylogenies; basal relationships are poorly supported on the actual gene trees, so some relationships among St, Y, H, and “UK” are unclear. The colored lines represent contributions to polyploids; unbroken and dotted lines represent major and minor contributions, respectively. Colors follow Figures 1–5. The St (Pseudoroegneria) and H (Hordeum) species are distinguished as Old World (OW) and New World (NW). a. StStHH species. The red-and-blue lines indicate where the North American (blue) and Eurasian (red) groups received major contributions from the same, or phylogenetically similar, donors. The β-amylase and pepC trees suggest fairly straightforward New World origins, with few minor St- or H-genome contributions. The GBSSI tree shows more complicated origins, especially with respect to Hordeum’s contribution. b. StStYY species. Without any representative Y-genome diploids, a single donor is hypothesized based on monophyly and sequence similarity (Figures 3–5). Primary St-genome donors are a mix of New World (β-amylase) and Old World (pepC and GBSSI), with minor contributions from the alternate region in all three cases. c. Elymus repens. All trees are at least consistent with a single Old World St-genome contribution. The presence of a third (“UK”) clade on all trees reveals an unknown genome donor. There is no single, major H-genome contributor, but a mix of multiple contributors. Contributions unique to the GBSSI tree (from Taeniatherum, and from an unknown species from the tribe Poeae) are consistent with introgression after polyploidization.
Phenomena that affect polyploid phylogenies.
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| 1. Homoeolog loss following polyploidization | No | Polyploids | Placement of polyploid varies depending on which copy is retained. |
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| 2. Paralogy; paralogs retained and intensively sampled | No | Both | Intra-individual polymorphism shared by all species with duplication; duplicate clades on tree. |
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| 3. Paralogy; limited paralog sampling | No | Both | Sporadic intra-individual polymorphism, polyphyletic taxa, incongruence with other gene trees. | – |
| 4. Paralogy; loss of paralogs | No | Both | Sporadic intra-individual polymorphism, polyphyletic taxa, incongruence with other gene trees. |
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| 5. Diploid progenitor(s) extinct, undiscovered, or unsampled | Yes | Polyploids | One or more homoeologs unassociated with any diploid. |
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| 6. Recurrent origins of a polyploid combination | Yes | Polyploids | Polyploid sequences polyphyletic within donor clades and congruent among gene trees. |
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| 7. Introgression among genomically similar recurrent polyploids | No | Polyploids | Polyploid sequences polyphyletic within donor clades and incongruent among gene trees. |
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| 8. Introgression among species derived from a single polyploid ancestor | No | Polyploids | Polyploid sequences monophyletic within donor clades and otherwise incongruent among gene trees. |
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| 9. Introgression among genomically distinct polyploid lineages | No | Polyploids | Polyploid sequences broadly polyphyletic across multiple donor clades and incongruent among gene trees. |
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| 10. Introgression from diploid to polyploid | No | Polyploids | Polyploid sequences polyphyletic within donor clades and incongruent among gene trees. |
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| 11. Introgression among diploids prior to polyploidization | No | Both | Sequences from diploids and their derived polyploids are polyphyletic and incongruent among gene trees. |
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Figure 8Summary diagram of Elymus origins.
Unbroken lines represent major contributions, and dotted lines show minor contributions. Colors follow Figures 1–7. The simple bifurcating division of Pseudoroegneria (St) and Hordeum (H) progenitor species into Old World (OW) and New World (NW) lineages is used for illustrative purposes and does not reflect their true phylogenetic complexity, particularly within Hordeum.