4.6 Article

Of Traits and Trees: Probabilistic Distances under Continuous Trait Models for Dissecting the Interplay among Phylogeny, Model, and Data

期刊

SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY
卷 70, 期 4, 页码 660-680

出版社

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/sysbio/syab009

关键词

Brownian motion; comparative methods; phylogeny; quantitative traits

资金

  1. National Science Foundation [DEB-1949268, BCS-2001063]
  2. National Institutes of Health [R35GM128590]

向作者/读者索取更多资源

Stochastic models of character trait evolution play a crucial role in evolutionary biology, with recent focus on considering model parameters and probability distributions when quantifying distances between phylogenetic models. By comparing probability distributions induced by two phylogenies, these distances can provide more informative results than traditional approaches based solely on topology or branch length differences. However, current methods are limited to comparing nucleotide substitution and gene tree distribution models, without addressing other trait classes and associated models.
Stochastic models of character trait evolution have become a cornerstone of evolutionary biology in an array of contexts. While probabilistic models have been used extensively for statistical inference, they have largely been ignored for the purpose of measuring distances between phylogeny-aware models. Recent contributions to the problem of phylogenetic distance computation have highlighted the importance of explicitly considering evolutionary model parameters and their impacts on molecular sequence data when quantifying dissimilarity between trees. By comparing two phylogenies in terms of their induced probability distributions that are functions of many model parameters, these distances can be more informative than traditional approaches that rely strictly on differences in topology or branch lengths alone. Currently, however, these approaches are designed for comparing models of nucleotide substitution and gene tree distributions, and thus, are unable to address other classes of traits and associated models that may be of interest to evolutionary biologists. Here, we expand the principles of probabilistic phylogenetic distances to compute tree distances under models of continuous trait evolution along a phylogeny. By explicitly considering both the degree of relatedness among species and the evolutionary processes that collectively give rise to character traits, these distances provide a foundation for comparing models and their predictions, and for quantifying the impacts of assuming one phylogenetic background over another while studying the evolution of a particular trait. We demonstrate the properties of these approaches using theory, simulations, and several empirical data sets that highlight potential uses of probabilistic distances in many scenarios. We also introduce an open-source R package named PRDATR for easy application by the scientific community for computing phylogenetic distances under models of character trait evolution.

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