Abstract

To better understand the evolutionary history of a group of organisms, an accurate estimate of the species phylogeny must be known. Traditionally, gene trees have served as a proxy for the species tree, although it was acknowledged early on that these trees represented different evolutionary processes. Discordances among gene trees and between the gene trees and the species tree are also expected in closely related species that have rapidly diverged, due to processes such as the incomplete sorting of ancestral polymorphisms. Recently, methods have been developed for the explicit estimation of species trees, using information from multilocus gene trees while accommodating heterogeneity among them. Here we have used three distinct approaches to estimate the species tree for five Phytophthora pathogens, including P. infestans, the causal agent of late blight disease in potato and tomato. Our concatenation-based “supergene” approach was unable to resolve relationships even with data from both the nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, and from multiple isolates per species. Our multispecies coalescent approach using both Bayesian and maximum likelihood methods was able to estimate a moderately supported species tree showing a close relationship among P. infestans, P. andina, and P. ipomoeae. The topology of the species tree was also identical to the dominant phylogenetic history estimated in our third approach, Bayesian concordance analysis. Our results support previous suggestions that P. andina is a hybrid species, with P. infestans representing one parental lineage. The other parental lineage is not known, but represents an independent evolutionary lineage more closely related to P. ipomoeae. While all five species likely originated in the New World, further study is needed to determine when and under what conditions this hybridization event may have occurred.

Highlights

  • The reconstruction of accurate species relationships is a prerequisite for the development of evolutionary hypotheses related to the speciation process

  • Sequences were generated for the ribosomal RNA ITS1 and ITS2 regions, the Piypt1 locus [38], and six nuclear loci previously used in a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the Phytophthora genus [24]

  • We used two methods implementing the multispecies coalescent approach, which assumes incomplete lineage sorting is the main source of discordance among gene trees [6]

Read more

Summary

Introduction

The reconstruction of accurate species relationships is a prerequisite for the development of evolutionary hypotheses related to the speciation process. Most utilize a multispecies coalescent approach to accommodate incomplete lineage sorting as the major source of discordance among gene trees (reviewed in [9]), and both maximum likelihood [10,11] and Bayesian [12,13] frameworks have been developed. All of these methods allow for the decoupling of gene tree reconstruction from species tree estimation, and several incorporate gene tree uncertainty into the species tree estimate [12,13,14]. All methods assume no recombination within loci and free recombination among loci

Objectives
Methods
Results
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

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.