Literature DB >> 30411803

Nuclear protein phylogenies support the monophyly of the three bryophyte groups (Bryophyta Schimp.).

Filipe de Sousa1, Peter G Foster2, Philip C J Donoghue3, Harald Schneider2,3,4, Cymon J Cox1.   

Abstract

Unraveling the phylogenetic relationships between the four major lineages of terrestrial plants (mosses, liverworts, hornworts, and vascular plants) is essential for an understanding of the evolution of traits specific to land plants, such as their complex life cycles, and the evolutionary development of stomata and vascular tissue. Well supported phylogenetic hypotheses resulting from different data and methods are often incongruent due to processes of nucleotide evolution that are difficult to model, for example substitutional saturation and composition heterogeneity. We reanalysed a large published dataset of nuclear data and modelled these processes using degenerate-codon recoding and tree-heterogeneous composition substitution models. Our analyses resolved bryophytes as a monophyletic group and showed that the nonnonmonophyly of the clade that is supported by the analysis of nuclear nucleotide data is due solely to fast-evolving synonymous substitutions. The current congruence among phylogenies of both nuclear and chloroplast analyses lent considerable support to the conclusion that the bryophytes are a monophyletic group. An initial split between bryophytes and vascular plants implies that the bryophyte life cycle (with a dominant gametophyte nurturing an unbranched sporophyte) may not be ancestral to all land plants and that stomata are likely to be a symplesiomorphy among embryophytes.
© 2018 The Authors. New Phytologist © 2018 New Phytologist Trust.

Entities:  

Keywords:  bryophytes; compositional heterogeneity; land plants; life cycle; phylogenomics; substitutional saturation

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2018        PMID: 30411803     DOI: 10.1111/nph.15587

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  New Phytol        ISSN: 0028-646X            Impact factor:   10.151


  14 in total

1.  Genome size and endopolyploidy evolution across the moss phylogeny.

Authors:  Jillian D Bainard; Steven G Newmaster; Jessica M Budke
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2020-03-29       Impact factor: 4.357

2.  Chromatin Organization in Early Land Plants Reveals an Ancestral Association between H3K27me3, Transposons, and Constitutive Heterochromatin.

Authors:  Sean A Montgomery; Yasuhiro Tanizawa; Bence Galik; Nan Wang; Tasuku Ito; Takako Mochizuki; Svetlana Akimcheva; John L Bowman; Valérie Cognat; Laurence Maréchal-Drouard; Heinz Ekker; Syuan-Fei Hong; Takayuki Kohchi; Shih-Shun Lin; Li-Yu Daisy Liu; Yasukazu Nakamura; Lia R Valeeva; Eugene V Shakirov; Dorothy E Shippen; Wei-Lun Wei; Masaru Yagura; Shohei Yamaoka; Katsuyuki T Yamato; Chang Liu; Frédéric Berger
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2020-01-30       Impact factor: 10.834

Review 3.  Charting the genomic landscape of seed-free plants.

Authors:  Péter Szövényi; Andika Gunadi; Fay-Wei Li
Journal:  Nat Plants       Date:  2021-04-05       Impact factor: 15.793

4.  The complete plastid genome sequence of the enigmatic moss, Takakia lepidozioides (Takakiopsida, Bryophyta): evolutionary perspectives on the largest collection of genes in mosses and the intensive RNA editing.

Authors:  Atsushi Sadamitsu; Yuya Inoue; Keiko Sakakibara; Hiromi Tsubota; Tomio Yamaguchi; Hironori Deguchi; Tomoaki Nishiyama; Masaki Shimamura
Journal:  Plant Mol Biol       Date:  2021-11-24       Impact factor: 4.076

Review 5.  The bryophytes Physcomitrium patens and Marchantia polymorpha as model systems for studying evolutionary cell and developmental biology in plants.

Authors:  Satoshi Naramoto; Yuki Hata; Tomomichi Fujita; Junko Kyozuka
Journal:  Plant Cell       Date:  2022-01-20       Impact factor: 12.085

6.  Different from tracheophytes, liverworts commonly have mixed 35S and 5S arrays.

Authors:  Aretuza Sousa; Julia Bechteler; Eva M Temsch; Susanne S Renner
Journal:  Ann Bot       Date:  2020-06-01       Impact factor: 4.357

7.  Six-State Amino Acid Recoding is not an Effective Strategy to Offset Compositional Heterogeneity and Saturation in Phylogenetic Analyses.

Authors:  Alexandra M Hernandez; Joseph F Ryan
Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2021-10-13       Impact factor: 15.683

Review 8.  The Elaboration of miRNA Regulation and Gene Regulatory Networks in Plant⁻Microbe Interactions.

Authors:  Sophie de Vries; Jan de Vries; Laura E Rose
Journal:  Genes (Basel)       Date:  2019-04-21       Impact factor: 4.096

9.  Evolution and networks in ancient and widespread symbioses between Mucoromycotina and liverworts.

Authors:  William R Rimington; Silvia Pressel; Jeffrey G Duckett; Katie J Field; Martin I Bidartondo
Journal:  Mycorrhiza       Date:  2019-11-13       Impact factor: 3.387

10.  Anthoceros genomes illuminate the origin of land plants and the unique biology of hornworts.

Authors:  Fay-Wei Li; Tomoaki Nishiyama; Manuel Waller; Eftychios Frangedakis; Jean Keller; Zheng Li; Noe Fernandez-Pozo; Michael S Barker; Tom Bennett; Miguel A Blázquez; Shifeng Cheng; Andrew C Cuming; Jan de Vries; Sophie de Vries; Pierre-Marc Delaux; Issa S Diop; C Jill Harrison; Duncan Hauser; Jorge Hernández-García; Alexander Kirbis; John C Meeks; Isabel Monte; Sumanth K Mutte; Anna Neubauer; Dietmar Quandt; Tanner Robison; Masaki Shimamura; Stefan A Rensing; Juan Carlos Villarreal; Dolf Weijers; Susann Wicke; Gane K-S Wong; Keiko Sakakibara; Péter Szövényi
Journal:  Nat Plants       Date:  2020-03-13       Impact factor: 15.793

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