Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny

Abstract Cophylogeny is the congruence of phylogenetic relationships between two different groups of organisms due to their long‐term interaction. We investigated the use of tree shape distance measures to quantify the degree of cophylogeny. We implemented a reverse‐time simulation model of pathogen...

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Main Authors: Mariano Avino, Garway T. Ng, Yiying He, Mathias S. Renaud, Bradley R. Jones, Art F. Y. Poon
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Wiley 2019-06-01
Series:Ecology and Evolution
Subjects:
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5185
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spelling doaj-e7245970f56d4a9d99541479d3cc083d2021-03-02T06:56:45ZengWileyEcology and Evolution2045-77582019-06-019126756677110.1002/ece3.5185Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogenyMariano Avino0Garway T. Ng1Yiying He2Mathias S. Renaud3Bradley R. Jones4Art F. Y. Poon5Department of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Western University London Ontario CanadaDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Western University London Ontario CanadaDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Western University London Ontario CanadaDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Western University London Ontario CanadaBC Centre for Excellence in HIV/AIDS Vancouver British Columbia CanadaDepartment of Pathology and Laboratory Medicine Western University London Ontario CanadaAbstract Cophylogeny is the congruence of phylogenetic relationships between two different groups of organisms due to their long‐term interaction. We investigated the use of tree shape distance measures to quantify the degree of cophylogeny. We implemented a reverse‐time simulation model of pathogen phylogenies within a fixed host tree, given cospeciation probability, host switching, and pathogen speciation rates. We used this model to evaluate 18 distance measures between host and pathogen trees including two kernel distances that we developed for labeled and unlabeled trees, which use branch lengths and accommodate different size trees. Finally, we used these measures to revisit published cophylogenetic studies, where authors described the observed associations as representing a high or low degree of cophylogeny. Our simulations demonstrated that some measures are more informative than others with respect to specific coevolution parameters especially when these did not assume extreme values. For real datasets, trees’ associations projection revealed clustering of high concordance studies suggesting that investigators are describing it in a consistent way. Our results support the hypothesis that measures can be useful for quantifying cophylogeny. This motivates their usage in the field of coevolution and supports the development of simulation‐based methods, i.e., approximate Bayesian computation, to estimate the underlying coevolutionary parameters.https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5185coevolutioncophylogenyhost switchingkerneltree measurestree shape
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mariano Avino
Garway T. Ng
Yiying He
Mathias S. Renaud
Bradley R. Jones
Art F. Y. Poon
spellingShingle Mariano Avino
Garway T. Ng
Yiying He
Mathias S. Renaud
Bradley R. Jones
Art F. Y. Poon
Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
Ecology and Evolution
coevolution
cophylogeny
host switching
kernel
tree measures
tree shape
author_facet Mariano Avino
Garway T. Ng
Yiying He
Mathias S. Renaud
Bradley R. Jones
Art F. Y. Poon
author_sort Mariano Avino
title Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
title_short Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
title_full Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
title_fullStr Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
title_full_unstemmed Tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
title_sort tree shape‐based approaches for the comparative study of cophylogeny
publisher Wiley
series Ecology and Evolution
issn 2045-7758
publishDate 2019-06-01
description Abstract Cophylogeny is the congruence of phylogenetic relationships between two different groups of organisms due to their long‐term interaction. We investigated the use of tree shape distance measures to quantify the degree of cophylogeny. We implemented a reverse‐time simulation model of pathogen phylogenies within a fixed host tree, given cospeciation probability, host switching, and pathogen speciation rates. We used this model to evaluate 18 distance measures between host and pathogen trees including two kernel distances that we developed for labeled and unlabeled trees, which use branch lengths and accommodate different size trees. Finally, we used these measures to revisit published cophylogenetic studies, where authors described the observed associations as representing a high or low degree of cophylogeny. Our simulations demonstrated that some measures are more informative than others with respect to specific coevolution parameters especially when these did not assume extreme values. For real datasets, trees’ associations projection revealed clustering of high concordance studies suggesting that investigators are describing it in a consistent way. Our results support the hypothesis that measures can be useful for quantifying cophylogeny. This motivates their usage in the field of coevolution and supports the development of simulation‐based methods, i.e., approximate Bayesian computation, to estimate the underlying coevolutionary parameters.
topic coevolution
cophylogeny
host switching
kernel
tree measures
tree shape
url https://doi.org/10.1002/ece3.5185
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