Disparity, diversity, and duplications in the Caryophyllales
Abstract
The role played by whole genome duplication (WGD) in plant evolution is actively debated. WGDs have been associated with advantages such as superior colonization, various adaptations, and increased effective population size. However, the lack of a comprehensive mapping of WGDs within a major plant clade has led to uncertainty regarding the potential association of WGDs and higher diversification rates.
Using seven chloroplast and nuclear ribosomal genes, we constructed a phylogeny of 5036 species of Caryophyllales, representing nearly half of the extant species. We phylogenetically mapped putative WGDs as identified from analyses on transcriptomic and genomic data and analyzed these in conjunction with shifts in climatic occupancy and lineage diversification rate.
Thirteen putative WGDs and 27 diversification shifts could be mapped onto the phylogeny. Of these, four WGDs were concurrent with diversification shifts, with other diversification shifts occurring at more recent nodes than WGDs. Five WGDs were associated with shifts to colder climatic occupancy.
While we find that many diversification shifts occur after WGDs, it is difficult to consider diversification and duplication to be tightly correlated. Our findings suggest that duplications may often occur along with shifts in either diversification rate, climatic occupancy, or rate of evolution.
Repository Citation
Smith, Stephen A., Joseph W. Brown, Ya Yang, Riva Bruenn, et al. 2018. "Disparity, diversity, and duplications in the Caryophyllales." New Phytologist 217(2): 836-854.
Publisher
Wiley
Publication Date
1-1-2018
Publication Title
New Phytologist
Department
Biology
Document Type
Article
DOI
https://dx.doi.org/10.1111/nph.14772
Keywords
Caryophyllales, Climatic occupancy, Diversification rates, Duplications, Phylogenomics
Language
English
Format
text