Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae)

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

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Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae). / Garrett, Phen; Becher, Hannes; Gussarova, Galina; dePamphilis, Claude W.; Ness, Rob W.; Gopalakrishnan, Shyam; Twyford, Alex D.

In: Frontiers in Plant Science, Vol. 13, 869583, 2022.

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

Garrett, P, Becher, H, Gussarova, G, dePamphilis, CW, Ness, RW, Gopalakrishnan, S & Twyford, AD 2022, 'Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae)', Frontiers in Plant Science, vol. 13, 869583. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.869583

APA

Garrett, P., Becher, H., Gussarova, G., dePamphilis, C. W., Ness, R. W., Gopalakrishnan, S., & Twyford, A. D. (2022). Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae). Frontiers in Plant Science, 13, [869583]. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.869583

Vancouver

Garrett P, Becher H, Gussarova G, dePamphilis CW, Ness RW, Gopalakrishnan S et al. Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae). Frontiers in Plant Science. 2022;13. 869583. https://doi.org/10.3389/fpls.2022.869583

Author

Garrett, Phen ; Becher, Hannes ; Gussarova, Galina ; dePamphilis, Claude W. ; Ness, Rob W. ; Gopalakrishnan, Shyam ; Twyford, Alex D. / Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae). In: Frontiers in Plant Science. 2022 ; Vol. 13.

Bibtex

@article{7905c4f6cd924164a2fd7f54361505ac,
title = "Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae)",
abstract = "Disentangling the phylogenetic relationships of taxonomically complex plant groups is often mired by challenges associated with recent speciation, hybridization, complex mating systems, and polyploidy. Here, we perform a phylogenomic analysis of eyebrights (Euphrasia), a group renowned for taxonomic complexity, with the aim of documenting the extent of phylogenetic discordance at both deep and at shallow phylogenetic scales. We generate whole-genome sequencing data and integrate this with prior genomic data to perform a comprehensive analysis of nuclear genomic, nuclear ribosomal (nrDNA), and complete plastid genomes from 57 individuals representing 36 Euphrasia species. The species tree analysis of 3,454 conserved nuclear scaffolds (46 Mb) reveals that at shallow phylogenetic scales postglacial colonization of North Western Europe occurred in multiple waves from discrete source populations, with most species not being monophyletic, and instead combining genomic variants from across clades. At a deeper phylogenetic scale, the Euphrasia phylogeny is structured by geography and ploidy, and partially by taxonomy. Comparative analyses show Southern Hemisphere tetraploids include a distinct subgenome indicative of independent polyploidy events from Northern Hemisphere taxa. In contrast to the nuclear genome analyses, the plastid genome phylogeny reveals limited geographic structure, while the nrDNA phylogeny is informative of some geographic and taxonomic affinities but more thorough phylogenetic inference is impeded by the retention of ancestral polymorphisms in the polyploids. Overall our results reveal extensive phylogenetic discordance at both deeper and shallower nodes, with broad-scale geographic structure of genomic variation but a lack of definitive taxonomic signal. This suggests that Euphrasia species either have polytopic origins or are maintained by narrow genomic regions in the face of extensive homogenizing gene flow. Moreover, these results suggest genome skimming will not be an effective extended barcode to identify species in groups such as Euphrasia, or many other postglacial species groups.",
keywords = "phylogeny, discordance, Euphrasia, taxonomic complexity, plastid, whole-genome sequencing, GENE FLOW, SCROPHULARIACEAE, CONSERVATION, ALIGNMENT, ANCIENT, GENOMES, PLANT",
author = "Phen Garrett and Hannes Becher and Galina Gussarova and dePamphilis, {Claude W.} and Ness, {Rob W.} and Shyam Gopalakrishnan and Twyford, {Alex D.}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.3389/fpls.2022.869583",
language = "English",
volume = "13",
journal = "Frontiers in Plant Science",
issn = "1664-462X",
publisher = "Frontiers Media S.A.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Pervasive Phylogenomic Incongruence Underlies Evolutionary Relationships in Eyebrights (Euphrasia, Orobanchaceae)

AU - Garrett, Phen

AU - Becher, Hannes

AU - Gussarova, Galina

AU - dePamphilis, Claude W.

AU - Ness, Rob W.

AU - Gopalakrishnan, Shyam

AU - Twyford, Alex D.

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - Disentangling the phylogenetic relationships of taxonomically complex plant groups is often mired by challenges associated with recent speciation, hybridization, complex mating systems, and polyploidy. Here, we perform a phylogenomic analysis of eyebrights (Euphrasia), a group renowned for taxonomic complexity, with the aim of documenting the extent of phylogenetic discordance at both deep and at shallow phylogenetic scales. We generate whole-genome sequencing data and integrate this with prior genomic data to perform a comprehensive analysis of nuclear genomic, nuclear ribosomal (nrDNA), and complete plastid genomes from 57 individuals representing 36 Euphrasia species. The species tree analysis of 3,454 conserved nuclear scaffolds (46 Mb) reveals that at shallow phylogenetic scales postglacial colonization of North Western Europe occurred in multiple waves from discrete source populations, with most species not being monophyletic, and instead combining genomic variants from across clades. At a deeper phylogenetic scale, the Euphrasia phylogeny is structured by geography and ploidy, and partially by taxonomy. Comparative analyses show Southern Hemisphere tetraploids include a distinct subgenome indicative of independent polyploidy events from Northern Hemisphere taxa. In contrast to the nuclear genome analyses, the plastid genome phylogeny reveals limited geographic structure, while the nrDNA phylogeny is informative of some geographic and taxonomic affinities but more thorough phylogenetic inference is impeded by the retention of ancestral polymorphisms in the polyploids. Overall our results reveal extensive phylogenetic discordance at both deeper and shallower nodes, with broad-scale geographic structure of genomic variation but a lack of definitive taxonomic signal. This suggests that Euphrasia species either have polytopic origins or are maintained by narrow genomic regions in the face of extensive homogenizing gene flow. Moreover, these results suggest genome skimming will not be an effective extended barcode to identify species in groups such as Euphrasia, or many other postglacial species groups.

AB - Disentangling the phylogenetic relationships of taxonomically complex plant groups is often mired by challenges associated with recent speciation, hybridization, complex mating systems, and polyploidy. Here, we perform a phylogenomic analysis of eyebrights (Euphrasia), a group renowned for taxonomic complexity, with the aim of documenting the extent of phylogenetic discordance at both deep and at shallow phylogenetic scales. We generate whole-genome sequencing data and integrate this with prior genomic data to perform a comprehensive analysis of nuclear genomic, nuclear ribosomal (nrDNA), and complete plastid genomes from 57 individuals representing 36 Euphrasia species. The species tree analysis of 3,454 conserved nuclear scaffolds (46 Mb) reveals that at shallow phylogenetic scales postglacial colonization of North Western Europe occurred in multiple waves from discrete source populations, with most species not being monophyletic, and instead combining genomic variants from across clades. At a deeper phylogenetic scale, the Euphrasia phylogeny is structured by geography and ploidy, and partially by taxonomy. Comparative analyses show Southern Hemisphere tetraploids include a distinct subgenome indicative of independent polyploidy events from Northern Hemisphere taxa. In contrast to the nuclear genome analyses, the plastid genome phylogeny reveals limited geographic structure, while the nrDNA phylogeny is informative of some geographic and taxonomic affinities but more thorough phylogenetic inference is impeded by the retention of ancestral polymorphisms in the polyploids. Overall our results reveal extensive phylogenetic discordance at both deeper and shallower nodes, with broad-scale geographic structure of genomic variation but a lack of definitive taxonomic signal. This suggests that Euphrasia species either have polytopic origins or are maintained by narrow genomic regions in the face of extensive homogenizing gene flow. Moreover, these results suggest genome skimming will not be an effective extended barcode to identify species in groups such as Euphrasia, or many other postglacial species groups.

KW - phylogeny

KW - discordance

KW - Euphrasia

KW - taxonomic complexity

KW - plastid

KW - whole-genome sequencing

KW - GENE FLOW

KW - SCROPHULARIACEAE

KW - CONSERVATION

KW - ALIGNMENT

KW - ANCIENT

KW - GENOMES

KW - PLANT

U2 - 10.3389/fpls.2022.869583

DO - 10.3389/fpls.2022.869583

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 35720561

VL - 13

JO - Frontiers in Plant Science

JF - Frontiers in Plant Science

SN - 1664-462X

M1 - 869583

ER -

ID: 312367815