Literature DB >> 32986823

Interrogating Genomic-Scale Data to Resolve Recalcitrant Nodes in the Spider Tree of Life.

Siddharth Kulkarni1,2, Robert J Kallal2, Hannah Wood2, Dimitar Dimitrov3, Gonzalo Giribet4, Gustavo Hormiga1.   

Abstract

Genome-scale data sets are converging on robust, stable phylogenetic hypotheses for many lineages; however, some nodes have shown disagreement across classes of data. We use spiders (Araneae) as a system to identify the causes of incongruence in phylogenetic signal between three classes of data: exons (as in phylotranscriptomics), noncoding regions (included in ultraconserved elements [UCE] analyses), and a combination of both (as in UCE analyses). Gene orthologs, coded as amino acids and nucleotides (with and without third codon positions), were generated by querying published transcriptomes for UCEs, recovering 1,931 UCE loci (codingUCEs). We expected that congeners represented in the codingUCE and UCEs data would form clades in the presence of phylogenetic signal. Noncoding regions derived from UCE sequences were recovered to test the stability of relationships. Phylogenetic relationships resulting from all analyses were largely congruent. All nucleotide data sets from transcriptomes, UCEs, or a combination of both recovered similar topologies in contrast with results from transcriptomes analyzed as amino acids. Most relationships inferred from low-occupancy data sets, containing several hundreds of loci, were congruent across Araneae, as opposed to high occupancy data matrices with fewer loci, which showed more variation. Furthermore, we found that low-occupancy data sets analyzed as nucleotides (as is typical of UCE data sets) can result in more congruent relationships than high occupancy data sets analyzed as amino acids (as in phylotranscriptomics). Thus, omitting data, through amino acid translation or via retention of only high occupancy loci, may have a deleterious effect in phylogenetic reconstruction.
© The Author(s) 2020. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Araneae; noncoding regions; phylogeny; target-capture; transcriptomics

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 32986823      PMCID: PMC7947752          DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msaa251

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Biol Evol        ISSN: 0737-4038            Impact factor:   16.240


  57 in total

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Journal:  Syst Biol       Date:  2021-01-01       Impact factor: 15.683

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Journal:  Nat Genet       Date:  2017-05-01       Impact factor: 38.330

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7.  HybPiper: Extracting coding sequence and introns for phylogenetics from high-throughput sequencing reads using target enrichment.

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Authors:  Claire C Morgan; Peter G Foster; Andrew E Webb; Davide Pisani; James O McInerney; Mary J O'Connell
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10.  Phylotranscriptomics: saturated third codon positions radically influence the estimation of trees based on next-gen data.

Authors:  Jesse W Breinholt; Akito Y Kawahara
Journal:  Genome Biol Evol       Date:  2013       Impact factor: 3.416

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  6 in total

1.  Chromosome-level genome assembly of the black widow spider Latrodectus elegans illuminates composition and evolution of venom and silk proteins.

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2.  Comprehensive Species Sampling and Sophisticated Algorithmic Approaches Refute the Monophyly of Arachnida.

Authors:  Jesús A Ballesteros; Carlos E Santibáñez-López; Caitlin M Baker; Ligia R Benavides; Tauana J Cunha; Guilherme Gainett; Andrew Z Ontano; Emily V W Setton; Claudia P Arango; Efrat Gavish-Regev; Mark S Harvey; Ward C Wheeler; Gustavo Hormiga; Gonzalo Giribet; Prashant P Sharma
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2022-02-03       Impact factor: 16.240

3.  Mitochondrial phylogenomics provides insights into the phylogeny and evolution of spiders (Arthropoda: Araneae).

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Journal:  Zool Res       Date:  2022-07-18

4.  The complete mitogenome of Plator insolens (Araneae: Trochanteriidae) with phylogenetic implication.

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5.  Comparative mitogenomic analyses provide evolutionary insights into the retrolateral tibial apophysis clade (Araneae: Entelegynae).

Authors:  Min Li; Min Liu; Shi-Yun Hu; Fang-Zhen Luo; Ming-Long Yuan
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2022-09-14       Impact factor: 4.772

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  6 in total

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