Molecular Evolution and Phylogenetic Utility of the petD Group II Intron: A Case Study in Basal Angiosperms
Open Access
- 20 October 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Oxford University Press (OUP) in Molecular Biology and Evolution
- Vol. 22 (2) , 317-332
- https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msi019
Abstract
Sequences of spacers and group I introns in plant chloroplast genomes have recently been shown to be very effective in phylogenetic reconstruction at higher taxonomic levels and not only for inferring relationships among species. Group II introns, being more frequent in those genomes than group I introns, may be further promising markers. Because group II introns are structurally constrained, we assumed that sequences of a group II intron should be alignable across seed plants. We designed universal amplification primers for the petD intron and sequenced this intron in a representative selection of 47 angiosperms and three gymnosperms. Our sampling of taxa is the most representative of major seed plant lineages to date for group II introns. Through differential analysis of structural partitions, we studied patterns of molecular evolution and their contribution to phylogenetic signal. Nonpairing stretches (loops, bulges, and interhelical nucleotides) were considerably more variable in both substitutions and indels than in helical elements. Differences among the domains are basically a function of their structural composition. After the exclusion of four mutational hotspots accounting for less than 18% of sequence length, which are located in loops of domains I and IV, all sequences could be aligned unambiguously across seed plants. Microstructural changes predominantly occurred in loop regions and are mostly simple sequence repeats. An indel matrix comprising 241 characters revealed microstructural changes to be of lower homoplasy than are substitutions. In showing Amborella first branching and providing support for a magnoliid clade through a synapomorphic indel, the petD data set proved effective in testing between alternative hypotheses on the basal nodes of the angiosperm tree. Within angiosperms, group II introns offer phylogenetic signal that is intermediate in information content between that of spacers and group I introns on the one hand and coding sequences on the other.Keywords
This publication has 57 references indexed in Scilit:
- Noncoding plastid trnT-trnF sequences reveal a well resolved phylogeny of basal angiospermsJournal of Evolutionary Biology, 2003
- The ins and outs of group II intronsTrends in Genetics, 2001
- Coding and noncoding plastid DNA in palm systematicsAmerican Journal of Botany, 2001
- Molecular phylogenetics of Melastomataceae and Memecylaceae: implications for character evolutionAmerican Journal of Botany, 2001
- Morphological Phylogenetic Analysis of Basal Angiosperms: Comparison and Combination with Molecular DataInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 2000
- A three-dimensional perspective on exon binding by a group II self-splicing intronThe EMBO Journal, 2000
- Patterns of Nucleotide Substitution in Angiosperm cpDNA trnL (UAA)–trnF (GAA) RegionsMolecular Biology and Evolution, 2000
- Organization and post-transcriptional processing of the psb B operon from chloroplasts of Populus deltoidesCurrent Genetics, 1999
- Domain 5 interacts with domain 6 and influences the second transesterification reaction of group II intron self-splicingNucleic Acids Research, 1993
- CONCEPTS AND TESTS OF HOMOLOGY IN THE CLADISTIC PARADIGMCladistics, 1991