1 Dan Graur Terminology of Phylogenetic Trees. 2 Evolutionary relationships are usually illustrated...

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1 Dan Graur Terminology of Terminology of Phylogenetic Phylogenetic Trees Trees

Transcript of 1 Dan Graur Terminology of Phylogenetic Trees. 2 Evolutionary relationships are usually illustrated...

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Dan Graur

Terminology of Terminology of Phylogenetic Phylogenetic

TreesTrees

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•Evolutionary relationships Evolutionary relationships are usually illustrated by are usually illustrated by means of a means of a phphyylologgenetic treeenetic tree ((dendodendoggram)ram). . •The “tree metaphor” cannot The “tree metaphor” cannot always be used.always be used.

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Ernst Heinrich Haeckel 1834-1919

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Jean-Baptiste [Pierre Antoine de Monet, Chevalier de] Lamarck. 1809

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Charles DarwinJuly 1837

July 2007

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Charles DarwinNovember 1859

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The terminology of phylogenetics is discombobulated.

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Graduate Student Assignments

Instead of a stream of emails that will yield unsatisfactory results, kindly set up appointments and let’s talk.

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In mathematics, a graph is an abstract representation of a set of objects called nodes (or vertices), some of which are connected to one another by links called branches (or edges). A path in a graph is a sequence of branches that connect any two nodes.

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Graphs = Trees + Non-Tree Graphs (or Networks)

In a tree (b), any two nodes are connected by a single path. In a network (a), there may be multiple pathways connecting two nodes.

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The evolutionary relationships among a group of organisms are illustrated by means of phylogenetic trees (or dendrograms).

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InternalExternal or Peripheral

Branch

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The branching pattern of a tree is called its topology.

Three different styles of trees, one topology.

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One topology

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Terminal node = Operational taxonomic unit (OTU)Internal node = Hypothetical taxonomic unit (HTU)Peripheral ( or terminal) branch = relationship between OTU and HTUInternal branch = relationship between two HTUs

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Bifurcating and multifurcating trees

A node is bifurcating (or binary or dichotomous) if it has only two immediate descendant lineages, but multifurcating (or polytomous) if it has three or more than two immediate descendant lineages. In a strictly bifurcating tree, each internal node is incident to exactly three branches, two derived and one ancestral.

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A bifurcation is always interpreted as a speciation event

Two possible interpretations for a multifurcation (polytomy) in a tree: 1. The polytomy represents the true sequence of events (hard polytomy), whereby an ancestral taxon gave rise to three or more descendant taxa simultaneously. 2. The polytomy represents a lack of resolution. The exact order of two or more bifurcations cannot be determined unambiguously with the available data (soft polytomy).

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Rooted and unrooted trees

In a rooted tree there exists a particular node, called the root, from which a unique path leads to any other node. The direction of each path corresponds to evolutionary time, and the root is the common ancestor of all the taxonomic units under study.

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In an unrooted tree with four external nodes, the internal branch is referred to as the central branchcentral branch.

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How many unrooted topologies are here?

a

b

c

d

e

a

ec

db

a

b

c

e

d

b

a

c

d

e

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• In an unrooted phylogenetic tree you cannot immediately assess evolutionary relationships.

• In a rooted phylogenetic tree, evolutionary relationships are evident.

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Phoronida (horseshoe worms)

Brachiopoda (lampshells)

Arthropoda (arthropods)

Which of the following taxa are evolutionarily the closest to Rick Perry? (a) Phoronida, (b) Brachiopoda, (c) Arthropoda, (d) all three taxa are equidistant from Perry, or (e) two taxa are closer to Perry than the third taxon.

Vertebrata (vertebrates)

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Cladograms & Phylograms(collectively Dendograms)

Bacterium 1

Bacterium 3

Bacterium 2

Eukaryote 1

Eukaryote 4

Eukaryote 3

Eukaryote 2

Bacterium 1

Bacterium 3Bacterium 2

Eukaryote 1

Eukaryote 4Eukaryote 3Eukaryote 2

Phylograms show branch order and branch lengths

Cladograms show branching order - branch lengths are meaningless

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Unscaled phylogramScaled phylogram

The branch length is number of changes (e.g., nucleotide substitutions) that have occurred along a branch. The total number of changes in a particular tree is called the tree length.

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Tree balance

Tree balance is a measure of the degree of symmetry of a rooted phylogenetic tree. It serves as an indication of the pattern of speciation events in the group of taxa under study.

Balanced tree Unbalanced or Pectinate (comb-like) tree

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Tree balance

In an unbalanced tree, only one descendant of a node continues to speciate after a splitting event. In a balanced tree, all descendants of a node participate equally in cladogenesis.

Balanced tree Unbalanced or Pectinate (comb-like) tree

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Tree balance

Tree balance is an important indicator of the ease of phylogenetic reconstruction. Because, by definition, unbalanced trees contain long branches, they are more difficult to reconstruct phylogenetically than balanced trees. In fact, unbalanced and balanced tree are sometimes referred to as “good” and “bad” trees, respectively (Sackin 1972).

Balanced tree Unbalanced or Pectinate (comb-like) tree

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How to describe a phylogenetic tree in computerese?

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The Newick format In computer programs, trees are represented in a linear form by a string of nested parentheses, enclosing taxon names (and possibly also branch lengths and bootstrap values), and separated by commas. This type of representation is called the Newick format. The originator of this format in mathematics was Arthur Cayley (1821–1895).

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The Newick format The Newick format for phylogenetic trees was adopted on June 26, 1986 at an informal meeting at Newick's Lobster House in Dover, New Hampshire. The Newick format currently serves as the de facto standard for representing phylogenetic tree and is employed by almost all phylogenetic software tools. Unfortunately, it has never been described in a formal publication; the first time it is mentioned in a publication is in 1992.

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The Newick format In the Newick format, the pattern of the parentheses indicates the topology of the tree by having each pair of parentheses enclose all members of a monophyletic group. A phylogenetic tree in the Newick format always ends in a semicolon (;).

;

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The Newick format 

One can use the Newick format to write down rooted trees, unrooted trees, multifurcations, branch lengths, and bootstrap values.

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3 OTUs

1 unrooted tree = 3 rooted trees

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4 OTUs

3 unrooted trees = 15 rooted trees

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The number of pThe number of possibleossible bifurcating rooted trees bifurcating rooted trees (N(NRR) for ) for nn 22OTUsOTUsNR =

(2n −3)!

2n−2(n−2)!

The number of possible The number of possible bifurcating unrooted trees bifurcating unrooted trees (N(NUU) for ) for nn 33OTUsOTUs

NU =(2n−5)!

2n−3(n−3)!

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Number of OTUs Number of possible rooted tree

2 13 34 155 1056 9547 10,3958 135,1359 2,027,02510 34,459,42515 213,458,046,676,875

208,200,794,532,637,891,559,375

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Evolution is an historical process.

Only one historical narrative is true.

From 8,200,794,532,637,891,559,375 possibilities, 1 possibility is true and 8,200,794,532,637,891,559,374 are false.

Truth is one, falsehoods are many.

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How do we know which of the

8,200,794,532,637,891,8,200,794,532,637,891,559,375559,375 trees is true?

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We don’t, we infer by using decision

criteria.

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True and inferred trees

The sequence of speciation events that has led to the formation of a group of OTUs is historically unique. A tree representing the true evolutionary history is called the true tree.

A tree that is obtained by using a certain set of data and a certain method of tree reconstruction is called an inferred tree.

An inferred tree may or may not be the true tree.

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ancestor

descendant 1 descendant 2

CladogenesisCladogenesis = the splitting of an evolutionary lineage into two genetically independent lineages.

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46descendant

AnagenesisAnagenesis = changes occurring along an evolutionary lineage.

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In molecular phylogenetics, we assume that species are only created by cladogenesis.

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Species Trees &

Gene Trees

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At every locus, if we trace back the history of any two alleles from any two populations, we will eventually reach a common ancestral allele from which both contemporary alleles have been derived.

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The routes of inheritance represent the passage of genes from parents to offspring, and the branching pattern depicts a gene tree.

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Different genes, however, may have different evolutionary histories, i.e., different routes of inheritance, different gene trees.

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The routes of inheritance are mostly confined by reproductive barriers—that is, gene flow occurs only within the species. A species is therefore like a bundle of genetic connections, in which many entangled parent-offspring lines form the ties that bundle individuals together into a species lineage.

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A gene tree may differ from a species tree

S = Divergence time for species 1 and 2

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A gene tree may differ from a species tree

S = Divergence time for species 1 and 2

G1 = Inferred divergence time by using alleles a and f

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A gene tree may differ from a species tree

Alleles d and b are closer to each other than alleles d and f.

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Incomplete lineage sorting due to polymorphism at speciation time

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Gene trees and species trees

It is often assumed that gene trees always equal species trees. This may be not be true.

a

b

c

A

B

D

Gene tree Species tree

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Taxon Taxon (singular);(singular); Taxa Taxa (plural)(plural) A taxon is a species or a group of species that has been given a name, e.g., Homo Homo sapienssapiens (modern humans) or LepidopteraLepidoptera (butterflies).

There are codes of biological nomenclature which seek to ensure that every taxon has a single and stable name, and that every name is used for only one taxon.

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• Strictly: A clade is a group of all the taxa that have been derived from a common ancestor plus the common ancestor itself.

• In molecular phylogenetics: A clade is a group of taxa under study that share a common ancestor, which is not shared by any other species outside the group.

Clades*

*also: monophyletic groups, natural clades

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• A taxon whose common ancestor is shared by any other taxon is called a paraphyletic taxon or an invalid taxon.

Paraphyletic Taxa

Reptiles are paraphyletic.

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• A named taxon that lacks phylogenetic validity, but is nonetheless used, is called a convenience taxon.

“a convenience fish”

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• If a clade is composed of two taxa, these are referred to as sister taxa.

Sister Taxa

Birds and crocodiles are sister taxa.

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Which of the following groups are not monophyletic?

E. coli rat mouse baboonchimp human

a. human, chimpanzee, baboon b. mouse, chimpanzee, baboonc. rat, moused. human, chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse

e. E. coli, human, chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse

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Which of the following groups are not monophyletic?

E. coli rat mouse baboonchimp human

a. human, chimpanzee, baboon b. mouse, chimpanzee, baboonc. rat, moused. human, chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse

e. E. coli, human, chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse

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Two or more sequences are said to be homologous if they are related by descent. Homology is often ascertained on the basis of sequence similarity. Thus, if two or more sequences exhibit high degrees of similarity, it is likely (but not always the case) that they are homologous. Sequence similarity may also arise without common ancestry: by chance, or due to convergence driven by similar selective pressures. Such sequences, which are similar but not homologous, are said to be analogous.

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Homology is a qualitative statement.

Similarity is a quantitative and, hence, quantifiable statement (e.g., percent similarity, percent identity).

Similarity is a fact. Homology is a hypothesis.

Of course, as with any other scientific hypothesis, homology between two sequences may be tested and every so often rejected.

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Types of homology

•Orthology: Similarity due to speciation. •Paralogy: Similarity due to gene duplication. •Ohnology: A special case of paralogy in which similarity is due to genome duplication.•Xenology: Similarity due to horizontal gene transfer.

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Orthologs and Paralogs

a Ab c BC

Ancestral gene

Duplication yields 2 copies (paralogs) on the same genome

orthologousorthologous

paralogous

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Orthologs and Paralogs

a Ab* c BC

ACb

A mixture of orthologs and paralogs is sampled

Only b, C, and A are sampled

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A character provides

information about an individual

OTU.

A distance represents

a quantitative statement concerning

the dissimilarity between two OTUs.

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A character is a well-defined feature that in a taxonomic unit can assume one out of two or more mutually exclusive character states. Mutually exclusive: If David is tall, David cannot be short.

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Continuous Discrete

BinaryMultistate

Unordered

UnpolarPolarUnpolarPolar

Character

Ordered

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A character is unordered if a change from one character state to any other character state can occur in one step.

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A character is ordered if there exists a symmetrical path of change from one character state to another.

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Polar

A character is polar if there exists an asymmetrical (irreversible) path of change from one character state to another.

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The number of steps between two character states is specified by a step matrix.

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Assumptions about character evolution

Methods of phylogenetic reconstruction require that we make explicit assumptions about:

(1) the number of discrete steps required for one character state to change into another.

(2) the probability with which such a change may occur.

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Temporal Polarity of Character States

Character states may be ranked by relative antiquity into:

(1) primitive or ancestral (plesiomorphy)

(2) derived or novel (apomorphy)

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Taxonomic Distribution of Character States

A primitive state that is shared by several taxa is a symplesiomorphy.

A derived state that is shared by several taxa is a synapomorphy.

A derived character state unique to a particular taxon is an autapomorphy.

A character state that is shared by several taxa due to convergence, parallelism and reversals, rather than due to common descent, is a homoplasy.

symbioisissympathysynapsesynteny

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C C

C

A

A

A

B A A

A

B

plesiomorphy

apomorphy

(autapomorphy)synapomorphy

symplesiomorphy

homoplasy

A

D

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What is swimming in shark and carp?

shark carp guppy chickenrat

bat

a. symplesiomorphic b. synapomorphicc. autapomorphicd. homoplasic

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What are scales in guppy and carp?

shark carp guppy chickenrat

bat

a. symplesiomorphic b. synapomorphicc. autapomorphicd. homoplasic

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What are feathers in chicken?

shark carp guppy chickenrat

bat

a. symplesiomorphic b. synapomorphicc. autapomorphicd. homoplasic

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What are wings in chicken and bat?

shark carp guppy chickenrat

bat

a. symplesiomorphic b. synapomorphicc. autapomorphicd. homoplasic

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Distance Data

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Most molecular data yield character states that are subsequently converted into distances.

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+

Ultrametricity = Strict Molecular Clock