Abstract

BackgroundIncreasing evidence from DNA sequence data has revealed that phylogenies based on different genes may drastically differ from each other. This may be due to either inter- or intralineage processes, or to methodological or stochastic errors. Here we investigate a spectacular case where two parts of the same gene (SlX1/Y1) show conflicting phylogenies within Silene (Caryophyllaceae). SlX1 and SlY1 are sex-linked genes on the sex chromosomes of dioecious members of Silene sect. Elisanthe.ResultsWe sequenced the homologues of the SlX1/Y1 genes in several Sileneae species. We demonstrate that different parts of the SlX1/Y1 region give different phylogenetic signals. The major discrepancy is that Silene vulgaris and S. sect. Conoimorpha (S. conica and relatives) exchange positions. To determine whether gene duplication followed by recombination (an intralineage process) may explain the phylogenetic conflict in the Silene SlX1/Y1 gene, we use a novel probabilistic, multiple primer-pair PCR approach. We did not find any evidence supporting gene duplication/loss as explanation to the phylogenetic conflict.ConclusionThe phylogenetic conflict in the Silene SlX1/Y1 gene cannot be explained by paralogy or artefacts, such as in vitro recombination during PCR. The support for the conflict is strong enough to exclude methodological or stochastic errors as likely sources. Instead, the phylogenetic incongruence may have been caused by recombination of two divergent alleles following ancient interspecific hybridization or incomplete lineage sorting. These events probably took place several million years ago. This example clearly demonstrates that different parts of the genome may have different evolutionary histories and stresses the importance of using multiple genes in reconstruction of taxonomic relationships.

Highlights

  • Increasing evidence from DNA sequence data has revealed that phylogenies based on different genes may drastically differ from each other

  • Using our novel approach to calculate the posterior probability that the actual number of sequence variants is the observed number, we found that for all species except S. nutans, the posterior probability is > 0.99 that there are no more undetected variants

  • There is a phylogenetic conflict in different parts of the Silene SlX1/Y1 gene that cannot be explained by gene duplications/losses or artefacts, such as in vitro recombination during PCR

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Summary

Introduction

Increasing evidence from DNA sequence data has revealed that phylogenies based on different genes may drastically differ from each other. This may be due to either inter- or intralineage processes, or to methodological or stochastic errors. Only small fractions of the genome are analyzed In systematic research, such regions are often assumed to reflect the organismal lineage ("species") phylogeny. These regions may have different evolutionary histories, which can lead to presence of several conflicting gene phylogenies. Taken together, these phylogenies can give clues to the organismal phylogeny Coalescence theory predicts that in some cases, the most probable gene tree will not even reflect the species tree [9,10], and this has been shown in simulation studies using coalescent models on concatenated data [11]

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