Abstract

Phylogenetic relationships among Chinese species of Morella (Myricaceae) are unresolved. Here, we use restriction site-associated DNA sequencing (RAD-seq) to identify candidate loci that will help in determining phylogenetic relationships among Morella rubra, M. adenophora, M. nana and M. esculenta. Three methods for inferring phylogeny, maximum parsimony (MP), maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian concordance, were applied to data sets including as many as 4253 RAD loci with 8360 parsimony informative variable sites. All three methods significantly favored the topology of (((M. rubra, M. adenophora), M. nana), M. esculenta). Two species from North America (M. cerifera and M. pensylvanica) were placed as sister to the four Chinese species. According to BEAST analysis, we deduced speciation of M. rubra to be at about the Miocene-Pliocene boundary (5.28 Ma). Intraspecific divergence in M. rubra occurred in the late Pliocene (3.39 Ma). From pooled data, we assembled 29378, 21902 and 23552 de novo contigs with an average length of 229, 234 and 234 bp for M. rubra, M. nana and M. esculenta respectively. The contigs were used to investigate functional classification of RAD tags in a BLASTX search. Additionally, we identified 3808 unlinked SNP sites across the four populations of M. rubra and discovered genes associated with fruit ripening and senescence, fruit quality and disease/defense metabolism based on KEGG database.

Highlights

  • Many domesticated fruit trees, such as peach (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch), plum (Prunus salicina Lindl.), kiwifruit

  • De novo assembly was implemented in Trinity using R2 reads, we obtained from 21902 to 29378 contigs with mean size of 229 to 234bp for M. rubra, M. nana and M. esculenta

  • Phylogenetic relationships and taxonomy of Morella rubra and its close relatives Previous phylogenetic studies have shown that Myrica gale and M. hartwegii are distinct from other species in the Linnaean genus Myrica [8, 57], requiring recognition of two genera, Myrica sensu stricto (2 spp.) and Morella Lour

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Summary

Introduction

Many domesticated fruit trees, such as peach (Prunus persica (L.) Batsch), plum (Prunus salicina Lindl.), kiwifruit

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