Abstract

BackgroundHybridization is observed in many eukaryotic lineages and can lead to the formation of polyploid species. The study of hybridization and polyploidization faces challenges both in data generation and in accounting for population-level phenomena such as coalescence processes in phylogenetic analysis. Genus Fragaria is one example of a set of plant taxa in which a range of ploidy levels is observed across species, but phylogenetic origins are unknown.ResultsHere, using 20 diploid and polyploid Fragaria species, we combine approaches from NGS data analysis and phylogenetics to infer evolutionary origins of polyploid strawberries, taking into account coalescence processes. We generate haplotype sequences for 257 low-copy nuclear markers assembled from Illumina target capture sequence data. We then identify putative hybridization events by analyzing gene tree topologies, and further test predicted hybridizations in a coalescence framework. This approach confirms the allopolyploid ancestry of F. chiloensis and F. virginiana, and provides new allopolyploid ancestry hypotheses for F. iturupensis, F. moschata, and F. orientalis. Evidence of gene flow between diploids F. bucharica and F. vesca is also detected, suggesting that it might be appropriate to consider these groups as conspecifics.ConclusionsThis study is one of the first in which target capture sequencing followed by computational deconvolution of individual haplotypes is used for tracing origins of polyploid taxa. The study also provides new perspectives on the evolutionary history of Fragaria.

Highlights

  • Hybridization is observed in many eukaryotic lineages and can lead to the formation of polyploid species

  • The frequency of variable sites differed across genes and individuals (Additional file 4: Figure S8), ranging from 0 to 2.3%

  • F. iturupensis had the highest frequency of heterozygous positions averaged across individuals and genes (0.28%), and F. daltoniana had the lowest (0.014%), with an overall average of 0.14% across all of the individuals and genes

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Hybridization is observed in many eukaryotic lineages and can lead to the formation of polyploid species. Genus Fragaria is one example of a set of plant taxa in which a range of ploidy levels is observed across species, but phylogenetic origins are unknown. Polyploidy is a property of an organism in which cells contain more than two complete sets of chromosomes. It has been an important evolutionary force shaping the process of diversification over the full history of eukaryotic life [1,2,3]. Evidence of allopolyploid speciation has been documented for many eukaryotes, including a substantial number of plants [6, 26,27,28,29,30,31]

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call