Literature DB >> 25070972

Mitochondrial phylogenomics of early land plants: mitigating the effects of saturation, compositional heterogeneity, and codon-usage bias.

Yang Liu1, Cymon J Cox1, Wei Wang1, Bernard Goffinet2.   

Abstract

Phylogenetic analyses using concatenation of genomic-scale data have been seen as the panacea for resolving the incongruences among inferences from few or single genes. However, phylogenomics may also suffer from systematic errors, due to the, perhaps cumulative, effects of saturation, among-taxa compositional (GC content) heterogeneity, or codon-usage bias plaguing the individual nucleotide loci that are concatenated. Here, we provide an example of how these factors affect the inferences of the phylogeny of early land plants based on mitochondrial genomic data. Mitochondrial sequences evolve slowly in plants and hence are thought to be suitable for resolving deep relationships. We newly assembled mitochondrial genomes from 20 bryophytes, complemented these with 40 other streptophytes (land plants plus algal outgroups), compiling a data matrix of 60 taxa and 41 mitochondrial genes. Homogeneous analyses of the concatenated nucleotide data resolve mosses as sister-group to the remaining land plants. However, the corresponding translated amino acid data support the liverwort lineage in this position. Both results receive weak to moderate support in maximum-likelihood analyses, but strong support in Bayesian inferences. Tests of alternative hypotheses using either nucleotide or amino acid data provide implicit support for their respective optimal topologies, and clearly reject the hypotheses that bryophytes are monophyletic, liverworts and mosses share a unique common ancestor, or hornworts are sister to the remaining land plants. We determined that land plant lineages differ in their nucleotide composition, and in their usage of synonymous codon variants. Composition heterogeneous Bayesian analyses employing a nonstationary model that accounts for variation in among-lineage composition, and inferences from degenerated nucleotide data that avoid the effects of synonymous substitutions that underlie codon-usage bias, again recovered liverworts being sister to the remaining land plants but without support. These analyses indicate that the inference of an early-branching moss lineage based on the nucleotide data is caused by convergent compositional biases. Accommodating among-site amino acid compositional heterogeneity (CAT-model) yields no support for the optimal resolution of liverwort as sister to the rest of land plants, suggesting that the robust inference of the liverwort position in homogeneous analyses may be due in part to compositional biases among sites. All analyses support a paraphyletic bryophytes with hornworts composing the sister-group to tracheophytes. We conclude that while genomic data may generate highly supported phylogenetic trees, these inferences may be artifacts. We suggest that phylogenomic analyses should assess the possible impact of potential biases through comparisons of protein-coding gene data and their amino acid translations by evaluating the impact of substitutional saturation, synonymous substitutions, and compositional biases through data deletion strategies and by analyzing the data using heterogeneous composition models. We caution against relying on any one presentation of the data (nucleotide or amino acid) or any one type of analysis even when analyzing large-scale data sets, no matter how well-supported, without fully exploring the effects of substitution models.
© The Author(s) 2014. Published by Oxford University Press, on behalf of the Society of Systematic Biologists. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oup.com.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Compositional heterogeneity; early land plants; evolutionary saturation; mitochondrial genome; phylogenomics; synonymous codon-usage bias

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2014        PMID: 25070972     DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syu049

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Syst Biol        ISSN: 1063-5157            Impact factor:   15.683


  35 in total

1.  Phylotranscriptomic analysis of the origin and early diversification of land plants.

Authors:  Norman J Wickett; Siavash Mirarab; Nam Nguyen; Tandy Warnow; Eric Carpenter; Naim Matasci; Saravanaraj Ayyampalayam; Michael S Barker; J Gordon Burleigh; Matthew A Gitzendanner; Brad R Ruhfel; Eric Wafula; Joshua P Der; Sean W Graham; Sarah Mathews; Michael Melkonian; Douglas E Soltis; Pamela S Soltis; Nicholas W Miles; Carl J Rothfels; Lisa Pokorny; A Jonathan Shaw; Lisa DeGironimo; Dennis W Stevenson; Barbara Surek; Juan Carlos Villarreal; Béatrice Roure; Hervé Philippe; Claude W dePamphilis; Tao Chen; Michael K Deyholos; Regina S Baucom; Toni M Kutchan; Megan M Augustin; Jun Wang; Yong Zhang; Zhijian Tian; Zhixiang Yan; Xiaolei Wu; Xiao Sun; Gane Ka-Shu Wong; James Leebens-Mack
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2014-10-29       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  Organellar phylogenomics of an emerging model system: Sphagnum (peatmoss).

Authors:  A Jonathan Shaw; Nicolas Devos; Yang Liu; Cymon J Cox; Bernard Goffinet; Kjell Ivar Flatberg; Blanka Shaw
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2016-06-06       Impact factor: 4.357

3.  Stomatal density and aperture in non-vascular land plants are non-responsive to above-ambient atmospheric CO2 concentrations.

Authors:  Katie J Field; Jeffrey G Duckett; Duncan D Cameron; Silvia Pressel
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2015-04-08       Impact factor: 4.357

4.  The evolution of the stomatal apparatus: intercellular spaces and sporophyte water relations in bryophytes-two ignored dimensions.

Authors:  Jeffrey G Duckett; Silvia Pressel
Journal:  Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci       Date:  2018-02-05       Impact factor: 6.237

5.  Estimating Bayesian Phylogenetic Information Content.

Authors:  Paul O Lewis; Ming-Hui Chen; Lynn Kuo; Louise A Lewis; Karolina Fučíková; Suman Neupane; Yu-Bo Wang; Daoyuan Shi
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2016-05-06       Impact factor: 15.683

6.  Excluding Loci With Substitution Saturation Improves Inferences From Phylogenomic Data.

Authors:  David A Duchêne; Niklas Mather; Cara Van Der Wal; Simon Y W Ho
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2022-04-19       Impact factor: 9.160

7.  Hornwort stomata do not respond actively to exogenous and environmental cues.

Authors:  Silvia Pressel; Karen S Renzaglia; Richard S Dicky Clymo; Jeffrey G Duckett
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2018-06-28       Impact factor: 4.357

8.  Whole-genome microsynteny-based phylogeny of angiosperms.

Authors:  Tao Zhao; Arthur Zwaenepoel; Jia-Yu Xue; Shu-Min Kao; Zhen Li; M Eric Schranz; Yves Van de Peer
Journal:  Nat Commun       Date:  2021-06-09       Impact factor: 14.919

9.  Homology-Aware Phylogenomics at Gigabase Scales.

Authors:  M J Sanderson; Marius Nicolae; M M McMahon
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2017-07-01       Impact factor: 9.160

10.  Large Phylogenomic Data sets Reveal Deep Relationships and Trait Evolution in Chlorophyte Green Algae.

Authors:  Xi Li; Zheng Hou; Chenjie Xu; Xuan Shi; Lingxiao Yang; Louise A Lewis; Bojian Zhong
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2021-07-06       Impact factor: 3.416

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