Literature DB >> 33084200

Exon probe sets and bioinformatics pipelines for all levels of fish phylogenomics.

Lily C Hughes1,2,3, Guillermo Ortí1,3, Hadeel Saad1, Chenhong Li4, William T White5, Carole C Baldwin3, Keith A Crandall1,2, Dahiana Arcila3,6,7, Ricardo Betancur-R7.   

Abstract

Exon markers have a long history of use in phylogenetics of ray-finned fishes, the most diverse clade of vertebrates with more than 35,000 species. As the number of published genomes increases, it has become easier to test exons and other genetic markers for signals of ancient duplication events and filter out paralogues that can mislead phylogenetic analysis. We present seven new probe sets for current target-capture phylogenomic protocols that capture 1,104 exons explicitly filtered for paralogues using gene trees. These seven probe sets span the diversity of teleost fishes, including four sets that target five hyperdiverse percomorph clades which together comprise ca. 17,000 species (Carangaria, Ovalentaria, Eupercaria, and Syngnatharia + Pelagiaria combined). We additionally included probes to capture legacy nuclear exons and mitochondrial markers that have been commonly used in fish phylogenetics (despite some exons being flagged for paralogues) to facilitate integration of old and new molecular phylogenetic matrices. We tested these probes experimentally for 56 fish species (eight species per probe set) and merged new exon-capture sequence data into an existing data matrix of 1,104 exons and 300 ray-finned fish species. We provide an optimized bioinformatics pipeline to assemble exon capture data from raw reads to alignments for downstream analysis. We show that legacy loci with known paralogues are at risk of assembling duplicated sequences with target-capture, but we also assembled many useful orthologous sequences that can be integrated with many PCR-generated matrices. These probe sets are a valuable resource for advancing fish phylogenomics because targeted exons can easily be extracted from increasingly available whole genome and transcriptome data sets, and also may be integrated with existing PCR-based exon and mitochondrial data.
© 2020 John Wiley & Sons Ltd.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Actinopterygii; evolution; phylogenetics; protein coding; systematics; target capture

Year:  2020        PMID: 33084200     DOI: 10.1111/1755-0998.13287

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Mol Ecol Resour        ISSN: 1755-098X            Impact factor:   7.090


  5 in total

1.  Evolutionary determinism and convergence associated with water-column transitions in marine fishes.

Authors:  Melissa Rincon-Sandoval; Emanuell Duarte-Ribeiro; Aaron M Davis; Aintzane Santaquiteria; Lily C Hughes; Carole C Baldwin; Luisángely Soto-Torres; Arturo Acero P; H J Walker; Kent E Carpenter; Marcus Sheaves; Guillermo Ortí; Dahiana Arcila; Ricardo Betancur-R
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2020-12-16       Impact factor: 11.205

2.  The impact of paleoclimatic changes on body size evolution in marine fishes.

Authors:  Emily M Troyer; Ricardo Betancur-R; Lily C Hughes; Mark Westneat; Giorgio Carnevale; William T White; John J Pogonoski; James C Tyler; Carole C Baldwin; Guillermo Ortí; Andrew Brinkworth; Julien Clavel; Dahiana Arcila
Journal:  Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A       Date:  2022-07-11       Impact factor: 12.779

3.  FishPIE: A universal phylogenetically informative exon markers set for ray-finned fishes.

Authors:  Xidong Mu; Yexin Yang; Jinhui Sun; Meng Xu; Changwei Shao; Ka Hou Chu; Wei Li; Chao Liu; Dangen Gu; Miao Fang; Chi Zhang; Fei Liu; Hongmei Song; Xuejie Wang; Jiehu Chen; Ka Yan Ma
Journal:  iScience       Date:  2022-08-28

4.  Phylogenomics and classification of Notropis and related shiners (Cypriniformes: Leuciscidae) and the utility of exon capture on lower taxonomic groups.

Authors:  Carla Stout; Susana Schonhuth; Richard Mayden; Nicole L Garrison; Jonathan W Armbruster
Journal:  PeerJ       Date:  2022-10-10       Impact factor: 3.061

5.  Genome Analysis of Lagocephalus sceleratus: Unraveling the Genomic Landscape of a Successful Invader.

Authors:  Theodoros Danis; Vasileios Papadogiannis; Alexandros Tsakogiannis; Jon B Kristoffersen; Daniel Golani; Dimitris Tsaparis; Aspasia Sterioti; Panagiotis Kasapidis; Georgios Kotoulas; Antonios Magoulas; Costas S Tsigenopoulos; Tereza Manousaki
Journal:  Front Genet       Date:  2021-12-08       Impact factor: 4.599

  5 in total

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