| Literature DB >> 27632535 |
Yan-Ping Xie1,2, Ying Meng3, Hang Sun1, Ze-Long Nie3.
Abstract
Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia are two morphologically similar and small genera in Fabaceae, with distributions largely corresponding to the Sino-Himalayan and Sino-Japanese subkingdoms in eastern Asia, respectively. These two genera have confusing relationships based on morphology; therefore, we aimed to provide a clear understanding of their phylogenetic and biogeographic evolution within eastern Asia. In our investigations we included 88 samples representing five Gueldenstaedtia species, five Tibetia species, and outgroup species were sequenced using five markers (nuclear: ITS; chloroplast: matK, trnL-F, psbA-trnH and rbcL). Our phylogenetic results support (1) the monophyly of Tibetia and of Gueldenstaedtia, respectively; and (2) that Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia are sister genera. Additionally, our data identified that Tibetia species had much higher sequence variation than Gueldenstaedtia species. Our results suggest that the two genera were separated from each other about 17.23 million years ago, which is congruent with the Himalayan orogeny and the uplift of the Tibetan Plateau in the mid Miocene. The divergence of Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia is strongly supported by the separation of the Sino-Himalayan and Sino-Japanese region within eastern Asia. In addition, the habitat heterogeneity may accelerate the molecular divergence of Tibetia in the Sino-Himalayan region.Entities:
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Year: 2016 PMID: 27632535 PMCID: PMC5025100 DOI: 10.1371/journal.pone.0162982
Source DB: PubMed Journal: PLoS One ISSN: 1932-6203 Impact factor: 3.240
Morphological, cytological and ecological differences among Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia s.str. and Chesneya (Fabaceae).
| Character | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Stem | almost absent or very short, sometimes prostrate | almost absent, or very short, with many branches | short, lignified |
| Stipules | amplexicaul, leaf-opposed, united, at least when young | lateral, not leaf-opposed, free from each other | herbaceous, adnate to petiole |
| Corolla color | yellow or purple | purple | yellow or purple |
| Pollen grains | 3- and 4-colporate | 3-colporate | |
| Pods | cylindric (blunt at apex) | cylindric or linear (acute at apex) | oblong to linear |
| Seeds | reniform, unglazed, never pitted, with irregular blackish spots | triangular-reniform, glazed, pitted, uniformly colored, never spotted | reniform |
| Chromosome number | 2n = 16 (x = 8) | 2n = 14 (x = 7) | 2n = 16 (x = 8) |
| Elevation | 3000–5000 m | 100–1600m | 2900–5300 m |
| Distribution | Bhutan, China, India, Nepal, Pakistan; | from Russia (Siberia) to the Sino-Himalayan region | central and southwest Asia, Mediterranean region |
Fig 1The distribution area and sample sites of Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia in eastern Asia.
The map is from the website http://www.naturalearthdata.com/.
Fig 2A Bayesian consensus tree of Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia based on combined nuclear and chloroplast sequences (tree length = 1224 steps, CI = 0.81, and RI = 0.97).
The bootstrap values in 1000 replicates are shown under the branches and Bayesian posterior probabilities higher than 95% are indicated above the lines. Maximum likelihood topology is displayed at the bottom left.
Sequence characteristics of Tibetia and Gueldenstaedtia, and sequence divergence values, which were estimated with pairwise distance.
| Characteristics | ITS | chloroplast | Combined | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. species sequenced | 69 | 71 | 70 | 61 | 66 | 76 | 76 |
| Missing data (%) | 9.21 | 6.58 | 7.89 | 19.74 | 13.16 | 0 | 0 |
| Sequence length (bp) | 720 | 1726 | 1391 | 577 | 1128 | 4822 | 5542 |
| Intra | 0–0.3 | 0–0.29 | 0–0.15 | 0–1.22 | 0–0. 12 | 0–0. 17 | 0–0. 16 |
| Intra | 0–1.57 | 0–0. 98 | 0–0. 72 | 0–2.40 | 0–1.12 | 0–1.71 | 0–1.21 |
| Intergenera (%) | 4.76–5.97 | 3.44–4.52 | 1.67–2.73 | 8.78–12.40 | 6.57–8.58 | 3.11–9.32 | 3.15–8.14 |
Fig 3Chronogram of Tibetia, Gueldenstaedtia and other related taxa from the Papilionoideae based on matK data.
Divergence times are shown using the computer program BEAST. The calibration nodes 1 (34±0.1 Ma), 2 (56±0.1 Ma), and 3 (40±0.4 Ma) are marked by arrows based on the fossil records. The root of the tree was set to no more than 60 Ma.