| Literature DB >> 27428747 |
Polina Yu Novikova1,2, Nora Hohmann3, Viktoria Nizhynska1, Takashi Tsuchimatsu1, Jamshaid Ali4, Graham Muir2, Alessia Guggisberg5, Tim Paape6, Karl Schmid7, Olga M Fedorenko8, Svante Holm9, Torbjörn Säll10, Christian Schlötterer11, Karol Marhold12,13, Alex Widmer4, Jun Sese14, Kentaro K Shimizu6, Detlef Weigel15, Ute Krämer4, Marcus A Koch3, Magnus Nordborg1.
Abstract
The notion of species as reproductively isolated units related through a bifurcating tree implies that gene trees should generally agree with the species tree and that sister taxa should not share polymorphisms unless they diverged recently and should be equally closely related to outgroups. It is now possible to evaluate this model systematically. We sequenced multiple individuals from 27 described taxa representing the entire Arabidopsis genus. Cluster analysis identified seven groups, corresponding to described species that capture the structure of the genus. However, at the level of gene trees, only the separation of Arabidopsis thaliana from the remaining species was universally supported, and, overall, the amount of shared polymorphism demonstrated that reproductive isolation was considerably more recent than the estimated divergence times. We uncovered multiple cases of past gene flow that contradict a bifurcating species tree. Finally, we showed that the pattern of divergence differs between gene ontologies, suggesting a role for selection.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27428747 DOI: 10.1038/ng.3617
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Nat Genet ISSN: 1061-4036 Impact factor: 41.307