Using plastid genome-scale data to resolve enigmatic relationships among basal angiosperms
Top Cited Papers
- 4 December 2007
- journal article
- Published by Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
- Vol. 104 (49) , 19363-19368
- https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0708072104
Abstract
Although great progress has been made in clarifying deep-level angiosperm relationships, several early nodes in the angiosperm branch of the Tree of Life have proved difficult to resolve. Perhaps the last great question remaining in basal angiosperm phylogeny involves the branching order among the five major clades of mesangiosperms (Ceratophyllum, Chloranthaceae, eudicots, magnoliids, and monocots). Previous analyses have found no consistent support for relationships among these clades. In an effort to resolve these relationships, we performed phylogenetic analyses of 61 plastid genes (≈42,000 bp) for 45 taxa, including members of all major basal angiosperm lineages. We also report the complete plastid genome sequence ofCeratophyllum demersum. Parsimony analyses of combined and partitioned data sets varied in the placement of several taxa, particularlyCeratophyllum, whereas maximum-likelihood (ML) trees were more topologically stable. Total evidence ML analyses recovered a clade of Chloranthaceae + magnoliids as sister to a well supported clade of monocots + (Ceratophyllum+ eudicots). ML bootstrap and Bayesian support values for these relationships were generally high, although approximately unbiased topology tests could not reject several alternative topologies. The extremely short branches separating these five lineages imply a rapid diversification estimated to have occurred between 143.8 ± 4.8 and 140.3 ± 4.8 Mya.Keywords
This publication has 76 references indexed in Scilit:
- Analysis of 81 genes from 64 plastid genomes resolves relationships in angiosperms and identifies genome-scale evolutionary patternsProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2007
- Hydatellaceae identified as a new branch near the base of the angiosperm phylogenetic treeNature, 2007
- A 567‐Taxon Data Set for Angiosperms: The Challenges Posed by Bayesian Analyses of Large Data SetsInternational Journal of Plant Sciences, 2007
- ANGIOSPERM DIVERGENCE TIMES: THE EFFECT OF GENES, CODON POSITIONS, AND TIME CONSTRAINTSEvolution, 2005
- The age of major monocot groups inferred from 800+rbcL sequencesBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2004
- Should we be worried about long-branch attraction in real data sets? Investigations using metazoan 18S rDNAMolecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 2004
- Angiosperm phylogeny based on matK sequence informationAmerican Journal of Botany, 2003
- An update of the Angiosperm Phylogeny Group classification for the orders and families of flowering plants: APG IIBotanical Journal of the Linnean Society, 2003
- Phylogenetic Analyses and Perianth Evolution in Basal AngiospermsAnnals of the Missouri Botanical Garden, 2003
- Confidence Limits on Phylogenies: An Approach Using the BootstrapEvolution, 1985