4.8 Article

Phylotranscriptomic analysis of the origin and early diversification of land plants

Publisher

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.1323926111

Keywords

land plants; Streptophyta; phylogeny; phylogenomics; transcriptome

Funding

  1. Alberta Ministry of Innovation and Advanced Education
  2. Alberta Innovates Technology Futures
  3. Innovates Centres of Research Excellence
  4. Musea Ventures
  5. BGI-Shenzhen for The 1000 Plants (1KP) initiative
  6. National Science Foundation [DBI-1265383, IOS 0922742, IOS 0922738, DEB 0830009, EF-0629817, DEB 0733029, DBI 1062335]
  7. National Institutes of Health [1R01DA025197]
  8. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada
  9. Direct For Biological Sciences
  10. Division Of Environmental Biology [0830009] Funding Source: National Science Foundation
  11. Division Of Integrative Organismal Systems
  12. Direct For Biological Sciences [0922742] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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Reconstructing the origin and evolution of land plants and their algal relatives is a fundamental problem in plant phylogenetics, and is essential for understanding how critical adaptations arose, including the embryo, vascular tissue, seeds, and flowers. Despite advances inmolecular systematics, some hypotheses of relationships remain weakly resolved. Inferring deep phylogenies with bouts of rapid diversification can be problematic; however, genome-scale data should significantly increase the number of informative characters for analyses. Recent phylogenomic reconstructions focused on the major divergences of plants have resulted in promising but inconsistent results. One limitation is sparse taxon sampling, likely resulting from the difficulty and cost of data generation. To address this limitation, transcriptome data for 92 streptophyte taxa were generated and analyzed along with 11 published plant genome sequences. Phylogenetic reconstructions were conducted using up to 852 nuclear genes and 1,701,170 aligned sites. Sixty-nine analyses were performed to test the robustness of phylogenetic inferences to permutations of the datamatrix or to phylogeneticmethod, including supermatrix, supertree, and coalescent-based approaches, maximum-likelihood and Bayesian methods, partitioned and unpartitioned analyses, and amino acid versus DNA alignments. Among other results, we find robust support for a sister-group relationship between land plants and one group of streptophyte green algae, the Zygnematophyceae. Strong and robust support for a clade comprising liverworts and mosses is inconsistent with a widely accepted view of early land plant evolution, and suggests that phylogenetic hypotheses used to understand the evolution of fundamental plant traits should be reevaluated.

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