On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?

Background: Phylogenomic analyses recently became popular to address questions about deep metazoan phylogeny. Ribosomal proteins (RP) dominate many of these analyses or are, in some cases, the only genes included. Despite initial hopes, hylogenomic analyses including tens to hundreds of genes still...

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Main Authors: Bleidorn, Christoph, Podsiadlowski, Lars, Zhong, Min, Eeckhaut, Igor, Hartmann, Stefanie, Halanych, Kenneth M., Tiedemann, Ralph
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Universität Potsdam 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-44893
http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2010/4489/
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spelling ndltd-Potsdam-oai-kobv.de-opus-ubp-44892013-01-08T00:59:09Z On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong? Bleidorn, Christoph Podsiadlowski, Lars Zhong, Min Eeckhaut, Igor Hartmann, Stefanie Halanych, Kenneth M. Tiedemann, Ralph Cirriferum myzostomida Mitochondrial genomes Transfer-rna Data sets Sequence Life sciences Background: Phylogenomic analyses recently became popular to address questions about deep metazoan phylogeny. Ribosomal proteins (RP) dominate many of these analyses or are, in some cases, the only genes included. Despite initial hopes, hylogenomic analyses including tens to hundreds of genes still fail to robustly place many bilaterian taxa. Results: Using the phylogenetic position of myzostomids as an example, we show that phylogenies derived from RP genes and mitochondrial genes produce incongruent results. Whereas the former support a position within a clade of platyzoan taxa, mitochondrial data recovers an annelid affinity, which is strongly supported by the gene order data and is congruent with morphology. Using hypothesis testing, our RP data significantly rejects the annelids affinity, whereas a platyzoan relationship is significantly rejected by the mitochondrial data. Conclusion: We conclude (i) that reliance of a set of markers belonging to a single class of macromolecular complexes might bias the analysis, and (ii) that concatenation of all available data might introduce conflicting signal into phylogenetic analyses. We therefore strongly recommend testing for data incongruence in phylogenomic analyses. Furthermore, judging all available data, we consider the annelid affinity hypothesis more plausible than a possible platyzoan affinity for myzostomids, and suspect long branch attraction is influencing the RP data. However, this hypothesis needs further confirmation by future analyses. Universität Potsdam Mathematisch-Naturwissenschaftliche Fakultät. Institut für Biochemie und Biologie 2009 Postprint application/pdf urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-44893 http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2010/4489/ BMC Evolutionary Biology 9 (2009), Art. 150, DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-9-150 eng http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/de/
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Cirriferum myzostomida
Mitochondrial genomes
Transfer-rna
Data sets
Sequence
Life sciences
spellingShingle Cirriferum myzostomida
Mitochondrial genomes
Transfer-rna
Data sets
Sequence
Life sciences
Bleidorn, Christoph
Podsiadlowski, Lars
Zhong, Min
Eeckhaut, Igor
Hartmann, Stefanie
Halanych, Kenneth M.
Tiedemann, Ralph
On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
description Background: Phylogenomic analyses recently became popular to address questions about deep metazoan phylogeny. Ribosomal proteins (RP) dominate many of these analyses or are, in some cases, the only genes included. Despite initial hopes, hylogenomic analyses including tens to hundreds of genes still fail to robustly place many bilaterian taxa. Results: Using the phylogenetic position of myzostomids as an example, we show that phylogenies derived from RP genes and mitochondrial genes produce incongruent results. Whereas the former support a position within a clade of platyzoan taxa, mitochondrial data recovers an annelid affinity, which is strongly supported by the gene order data and is congruent with morphology. Using hypothesis testing, our RP data significantly rejects the annelids affinity, whereas a platyzoan relationship is significantly rejected by the mitochondrial data. Conclusion: We conclude (i) that reliance of a set of markers belonging to a single class of macromolecular complexes might bias the analysis, and (ii) that concatenation of all available data might introduce conflicting signal into phylogenetic analyses. We therefore strongly recommend testing for data incongruence in phylogenomic analyses. Furthermore, judging all available data, we consider the annelid affinity hypothesis more plausible than a possible platyzoan affinity for myzostomids, and suspect long branch attraction is influencing the RP data. However, this hypothesis needs further confirmation by future analyses.
author Bleidorn, Christoph
Podsiadlowski, Lars
Zhong, Min
Eeckhaut, Igor
Hartmann, Stefanie
Halanych, Kenneth M.
Tiedemann, Ralph
author_facet Bleidorn, Christoph
Podsiadlowski, Lars
Zhong, Min
Eeckhaut, Igor
Hartmann, Stefanie
Halanych, Kenneth M.
Tiedemann, Ralph
author_sort Bleidorn, Christoph
title On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
title_short On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
title_full On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
title_fullStr On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
title_full_unstemmed On the phylogenetic position of Myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
title_sort on the phylogenetic position of myzostomida : can 77 genes get it wrong?
publisher Universität Potsdam
publishDate 2009
url http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:kobv:517-opus-44893
http://opus.kobv.de/ubp/volltexte/2010/4489/
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