Genome-scale data, angiosperm relationships, and "ending incongruence": a cautionary tale in phylogenetics
- PMID: 15465682
- DOI: 10.1016/j.tplants.2004.08.008
Genome-scale data, angiosperm relationships, and "ending incongruence": a cautionary tale in phylogenetics
Abstract
As systematists grapple with assembling the Tree of Life, recent studies have encouraged a genomic-scale approach, obtaining DNA sequence data for entire nuclear, plastid or mitochondrial genomes for a few exemplar taxa. Some have proclaimed that this comparative genomic strategy heralds the end of incongruence in phylogeny reconstruction. Although we applaud the use of many genes to resolve phylogenetic patterns, there is a significant caveat. In spite of, or even because of, the abundant data per taxon, whole-genome sequencing for a few exemplars can provide completely resolved and strongly supported, but incorrect, evolutionary reconstructions. We provide a conspicuous example that includes Amborella, the putative sister of all other extant angiosperms, highlighting the limits of phylogenetics when whole genomes are used but taxon sampling is poor.
Comment in
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The place of Amborella within the radiation of angiosperms.Trends Plant Sci. 2005 May;10(5):201-2. doi: 10.1016/j.tplants.2005.03.006. Trends Plant Sci. 2005. PMID: 15882650 No abstract available.
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Chloroplast genome phylogenetics: why we need independent approaches to plant molecular evolution.Trends Plant Sci. 2005 May;10(5):203-9. doi: 10.1016/j.tplants.2005.03.007. Trends Plant Sci. 2005. PMID: 15882651 Review.
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