Abstract

Phylogenetic inference can potentially result in a more accurate tree using data from multiple loci. However, if the loci are incongruent—due to events such as incomplete lineage sorting or horizontal gene transfer—it can be misleading to infer a single tree. To address this, many previous contributions have taken a mechanistic approach, by modeling specific processes. Alternatively, one can cluster loci without assuming how these incongruencies might arise. Such “process-agnostic” approaches typically infer a tree for each locus and cluster these. There are, however, many possible combinations of tree distance and clustering methods; their comparative performance in the context of tree incongruence is largely unknown. Furthermore, because standard model selection criteria such as AIC cannot be applied to problems with a variable number of topologies, the issue of inferring the optimal number of clusters is poorly understood. Here, we perform a large-scale simulation study of phylogenetic distances and clustering methods to infer loci of common evolutionary history. We observe that the best-performing combinations are distances accounting for branch lengths followed by spectral clustering or Ward’s method. We also introduce two statistical tests to infer the optimal number of clusters and show that they strongly outperform the silhouette criterion, a general-purpose heuristic. We illustrate the usefulness of the approach by 1) identifying errors in a previous phylogenetic analysis of yeast species and 2) identifying topological incongruence among newly sequenced loci of the globeflower fly genus Chiastocheta. We release treeCl, a new program to cluster genes of common evolutionary history (http://git.io/treeCl).

Highlights

  • Molecular phylogenetic methods infer the evolutionary history of homologous sequences

  • The clustering approach investigated here takes a set of sequence alignments, and from them describes a partition of the data that divides the alignments into non­overlapping subsets, each subset containing loci sharing a common phylogenetic history

  • We investigated clustering multi­locus data sets into evolutionarily similar groups based on their inferred phylogenies

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Summary

Introduction

Molecular phylogenetic methods infer the evolutionary history of homologous sequences. There are a number of methods for multilocus phylogenetic analysis (Bininda­Emonds et al 2002; de Queiroz and Gatesy 2007; Liu et al 2009).Many of these proceed by inferring the single evolutionary tree that best fits the entire data set. Such “averaging” over multiple loci presumes that these loci share a common evolutionary history. If we build a single summary tree from multiple loci we are implicitly assuming the former: that each locus is a noisy estimate of the same underlying tree

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