Abstract

BackgroundThe information in large collections of phylogenetic trees is useful for many comparative genomic studies. Therefore, there is a need for flexible tools that allow exploration of such collections in order to retrieve relevant data as quickly as possible.ResultsIn this paper, we present TPMS (Tree Pattern-Matching Suite), a set of programs for handling and retrieving gene trees according to different criteria. The programs from the suite include utilities for tree collection building, specific tree-pattern search strategies and tree rooting. Use of TPMS is illustrated through three examples: systematic search for incongruencies in a large tree collection, a short study on the Coelomata/Ecdysozoa controversy and an evaluation of the level of support for a recently published Mammal phylogeny.ConclusionTPMS is a powerful suite allowing to quickly retrieve sets of trees matching complex patterns in large collection or to root trees using more rigorous approaches than the classical midpoint method. As it is made of a set of command-line programs, it can be easily integrated in any sequence analysis pipeline for an automated use.

Highlights

  • The information in large collections of phylogenetic trees is useful for many comparative genomic studies

  • Comparative genomics is a central approach in sequence analysis, and many important biological results have been obtained through its use

  • Among the different programs and packages developed for comparative genomics, those using the information contained in phylogenetic trees are of special interest

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Summary

Results

Incongruencies detection The program tpms computation can be used to detect taxonomic incongruencies. As expected, both numbers decrease as we move from the leaves to the root of the tree due to the fact that deep nodes correspond to subtrees containing a growing number of taxa. We obtained a support level of 6/6466 for Pegasoferae, which is significantly lower than the one observed with the original topology

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