Aumentando a resolução filogenética em níveis taxonômicos baixos usando grande seuqenciamento paralelo de genomas de cloroplastos

quarta-feira, janeiro 27, 2010

Increasing phylogenetic resolution at low taxonomic levels using massively parallel sequencing of chloroplast genomes

Matthew Parks1 , Richard Cronn2 and Aaron Liston1

1 Department of Botany and Plant Pathology, Oregon State University, Corvallis, OR, 97331, USA

2 Pacific Northwest Research Station, USDA Forest Service, Corvallis, OR, 97331, USA

 author email corresponding author email

BMC Biology 2009, 7:84doi:10.1186/1741-7007-7-84

Published: 2 December 2009

Abstract

Background

Molecular evolutionary studies share the common goal of elucidating historical relationships, and the common challenge of adequately sampling taxa and characters. Particularly at low taxonomic levels, recent divergence, rapid radiations, and conservative genome evolution yield limited sequence variation, and dense taxon sampling is often desirable. Recent advances in massively parallel sequencing make it possible to rapidly obtain large amounts of sequence data, and multiplexing makes extensive sampling of megabase sequences feasible. Is it possible to efficiently apply massively parallel sequencing to increase phylogenetic resolution at low taxonomic levels?

Results

We reconstruct the infrageneric phylogeny of Pinus from 37 nearly-complete chloroplast genomes (average 109 kilobases each of an approximately 120 kilobase genome) generated using multiplexed massively parallel sequencing. 30/33 ingroup nodes resolved with ≥ 95% bootstrap support; this is a substantial improvement relative to prior studies, and shows massively parallel sequencing-based strategies can produce sufficient high quality sequence to reach support levels originally proposed for the phylogenetic bootstrap. Resampling simulations show that at least the entire plastome is necessary to fully resolvePinus, particularly in rapidly radiating clades. Meta-analysis of 99 published infrageneric phylogenies shows that whole plastome analysis should provide similar gains across a range of plant genera. A disproportionate amount of phylogenetic information resides in two loci (ycf1, ycf2), highlighting their unusual evolutionary properties.

Conclusion

Plastome sequencing is now an efficient option for increasing phylogenetic resolution at lower taxonomic levels in plant phylogenetic and population genetic analyses. With continuing improvements in sequencing capacity, the strategies herein should revolutionize efforts requiring dense taxon and character sampling, such as phylogeographic analyses and species-level DNA barcoding.

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