| Literature DB >> 27547537 |
Tilottama Roy1, Nathan S Catlin2, Drake M G Garner3, Philip D Cantino4, Anne-Cathrine Scheen5, Charlotte Lindqvist3.
Abstract
The subfamily Lamioideae (Lamiaceae) comprises ten tribes, of which only Stachydeae and Synandreae include New World members. Previous studies have investigated the phylogenetic relationships among the members of Synandreae based on plastid and nuclear ribosomal DNA loci. In an effort to re-examine the phylogenetic relationships within Synandreae, the current study incorporates data from four low-copy nuclear loci, PHOT1, PHOT2, COR, and PPR. Our results confirm previous studies based on chloroplast and nuclear ribosomal markers in supporting the monophyly of tribe Synandreae, as well as sister relationships between Brazoria and Warnockia, and between that pair of genera and a monophyletic Physostegia. However, we observe incongruence in the relationships of Macbridea and Synandra. The placement of Synandreae within Lamioideae is poorly resolved and incongruent among different analyses, and the sister group of Synandreae remains enigmatic. Comparison of the colonization and migration patterns corroborates a single colonization of the New World by Synandreae during the Late Miocene/Tortonian age. This is in contrast to the only other lamioid tribe that includes New World members, Stachydeae, which colonized the New World at least twice-during the mid-Miocene and Pliocene. Edaphic conditions and intolerance of soil acidity may be factors that restricted the distribution of most genera of Synandreae to southeastern and south-central North America, whereas polyploidy could have increased the colonizing capability of the more wide-ranging genus, Physostegia.Entities:
Keywords: Biogeography; Lamiaceae; North America; Nuclear markers; Phylogeny; Physostegia; Stachydeae; Synandreae
Year: 2016 PMID: 27547537 PMCID: PMC4958014 DOI: 10.7717/peerj.2220
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PeerJ ISSN: 2167-8359 Impact factor: 2.984
Figure 1Distribution map of Synandreae in North America.
Geographical ranges of the Synandreae genera are outlined and the geographic locations of the accessions included in this study are indicated with circles. See key for color coding of the genera. Distributions were based on Cantino (1980), Cantino (1982) and Turner (1996), and BONAP’s North American Plant Atlas (NAPA; http://www.bonap.org).
List of taxa and voucher information.
Herbaria abbreviations follow the Index Herbariorum (Holmgren, Holmgren & Barrett, 1990). One individual per species was included. For PHOT1, PHOT2, COR, and PPR, the number of sequences indicate the number of clones per species. cpDNA regions included: a, matK; b, rps16; c, trnL; d, trnL-F. For the cpDNA sequences the same accession of each of the species listed was sequenced.
| Taxon names | Tribe/subfamily | Voucher information | Geographic distribution | GenBank accession numbers | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| cpDNA | ||||||||
| Synandreae | M.W. Turner 25 (TEX) | USA |
| N/A | N/A |
| N/A | |
| Synandreae | M.W. Turner 61 (TEX) | Texas, USA |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Synandreae | D.S. Corell 1605 (GH) | Texas, USA |
| N/A | N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Synandreae | R.K. Godfrey & R.M. Tryon 741 (GH) | USA |
|
|
|
| c. | |
| Synandreae | C.L. Lundell & A.A. Lundell 16031 (US) | Texas, USA |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Synandreae | D.S. Corell & I.M. Johnston 19427 (LL) | Texas, USA |
|
|
| N/A | N/A | |
| Synandreae | P.D. Cantino 1076 (GH) | Texas, USA |
|
|
|
| c. | |
| Synandreae | R.K. Godfrey 77073 (GH) | Florida, USA |
|
|
| N/A | N/A | |
| Synandreae | V.L. Harms 34491 (GH) | Saskatchewan, Canada |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Synandreae | P.D. Cantino 1026 (GH) | Florida, USA |
|
|
|
| c. | |
| Synandreae | L.E. Brown 13523 (TEX) | Texas, USA |
|
| N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Synandreae | M. Mooar 13667 (GH) | Montana, USA |
|
|
|
| c. | |
| Synandreae | Wm.F. Mahler 8530 (GH) | Texas, USA |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Synandreae | P.D. Cantino 1007 (GH) | USA, Florida, Sarasota Co. |
| N/A |
| N/A | N/A | |
| Synandreae | P.D. Cantino 1007 (GH) | Florida, USA |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Synandreae | V.E. McNeilus 97–143 (GH) | Tennessee, USA |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Synandreae | M.W. Turner 67 (TEX) | Texas, USA |
|
|
|
| a. | |
| Pogostemoneae | E. Farkas & T. Pocs 86604 (UPS) | Tanzania |
| N/A | N/A |
| N/A | |
| Leucadeae | G.L. Maggs & L. Guarino 1072 (UPS) | Namibia | N/A | N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Leucadeae | I. Ortendahl 105 (UPS) | Namibia | N/A |
|
| N/A | N/A | |
| Marrubieae | M. Bendiksby & A.-C. Scheen (O) | Greece |
|
| N/A |
| N/A | |
| Marrubieae | M. Bendiksby & A.-C. Scheen 0420 (O) | Greece |
|
| N/A |
| N/A | |
| N/A | D. McNeal et al. 161 (C) | Georgia |
|
| N/A |
| N/A | |
| N/A | P. Montserrat & al. 141487 (C) | Spain |
| N/A | N/A |
| N/A | |
| Gomphostemmateae | R.G. Olmstead 93-38 | S. China to SE Asia |
|
|
|
| N/A | |
| Leucadeae | R. Abdallah et al. 493 (UPS) | Tanzania |
| N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Leucadeae | V. Goloskokov s.n., 15 May 1963 (C) | Ethiopia |
| N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Marrubieae | A. Strid 33875 (C) | Greece |
| N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Phlomideae | C. Mathiesen & J.M. Taylor 81 (National Collection of | Sardegna (Italy) to Transcaucasus |
|
|
|
| N/A | |
| Phlomideae | C. Mathiesen & J.M. Taylor 88 (National Collection of | EC Europe to China and Mongolia |
| N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Stachydeae | S. Perlman 6117 (BISH) | Hawaii/O’ahu |
|
| N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Scutellarioideae | M. Bendiksby & A.-C. Scheen 0411 (O) | Greece |
| N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Stachydeae | C. Lindqvist 10-02 (UB) | W. Canada to W. USA |
|
| N/A | N/A | N/A | |
| Stachydeae | C. Lindqvist & V.A. Albert 358 (UNA) | Macaronesia, Europe to W Himalaya (cultivar) | N/A | N/A |
|
| N/A | |
| Stachydeae | C. Lindqvist 11-02 (UB) | W.California/California, Monterey Co. |
|
| N/A |
| N/A | |
| Stachydeae | S. Perlman 6933 (BISH) | Hawaii |
|
| N/A |
| N/A | |
| Stachydeae | C. Lindqvist & V. A. Albert 82 (NY) | Hawaii | N/A | N/A |
| N/A | N/A | |
Notes.
Not available/included
Figure 2Phylogenetic gene trees.
Bayesian 50% majority rule consensus trees obtained from analyses of (A) PHOT1, (B) PHOT2, and (C) COR, respectively. Bayesian posterior probability values ≥0.95 and maximum likelihood bootstrap support values ≥80 are shown above and below the nodes, respectively. Numbers following taxon names refer to different clones from PCR products.
Figure 3Phylogenetic tree of concatenated nuclear loci.
Bayesian 50% majority rule consensus tree obtained from analyses of the concatenated dataset (COR, PHOT1, PHOT2, and PPR). Nodes supported by Bayesian posterior probability values (PP) ≥ 0.95 and maximum likelihood bootstrap support (BS) ≥ 80 are labeled with black dots. The black stars represent two nodes (clades A and B) discussed in the text, which both have a PP ≥ 0.90 and a BS > 95. Numbers following taxon names refer to different clones sequenced. The ancestral area reconstructions of Synandreae are labeled as circles next to their respective nodes (see ancestral area key), with left circles representing ancestral area reconstructions from S-DIVA and right circles from Lagrange, respectively. The dates from divergence timing analyses of Synandreae are mapped next to the respective nodes (ages are in Million years). A scale bar has been provided for ages in Million years ago (Mya).
Figure 4Multi-locus coalescent tree.
The coalescence-based tree is inferred from a *BEAST analysis of four nuclear loci (COR, PHOT1, PHOT2, and PPR), and a concatenated chloroplast DNA data set (matK, rps16, trnL intron, and trnL-F spacer). Only nodes with Bayesian posterior probability values ≥0.9 are labeled.
Figure 5Phylogenetic network.
NeighborNet analysis of the concatenated data set for the PHOT1 and PPR loci.