Phylogenetic incongruence arising from fragmented speciation in enteric bacteria

Evolutionary relationships among species are often assumed to be fundamentally unambiguous, where genes within a genome are thought to evolve in concert and phylogenetic incongruence between individual orthologs is attributed to idiosyncrasies in their evolution. We have identified substantial incon...

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Published inProceedings of the National Academy of Sciences - PNAS Vol. 107; no. 25; pp. 11453 - 11458
Main Authors Retchless, Adam C., Lawrence, Jeffrey G., Doolittle, W. Ford
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States National Academy of Sciences 22.06.2010
National Acad Sciences
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Summary:Evolutionary relationships among species are often assumed to be fundamentally unambiguous, where genes within a genome are thought to evolve in concert and phylogenetic incongruence between individual orthologs is attributed to idiosyncrasies in their evolution. We have identified substantial incongruence between the phylogenies of orthologous genes in Escherichia, Salmonella, and Citrobacter, or E. coli, E. fergusonii, and E. albertii. The source of incongruence was inferred to be recombination, because individual genes support conflicting topology more robustly than expected from stochastic sequence homoplasies. Clustering of phylogenetically informative sites on the genome indicated that the regions of recombination extended over several kilobases. Analysis of phylogenetically distant taxa resulted in consensus among individual gene phylogenies, suggesting that recombination is not ongoing; instead, conflicting relationships among genes in descendent taxa reflect recombination among their ancestors. Incongruence could have resulted from random assortment of ancestral polymorphisms if species were instantly created from the division of a recombining population. However, the estimated branch lengths in alternative phylogenies would require ancestral populations with far more diversity than is found in extant populations. Rather, these and previous data collectively suggest that genome-wide recombination rates decreased gradually, with variation in rate among loci, leading to pluralistic relationships among their descendent taxa.
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Author contributions: A.C.R. and J.G.L. designed research; A.C.R. performed research; A.C.R. and J.G.L. contributed new reagents/analytic tools; A.C.R. and J.G.L. analyzed data; and A.C.R. and J.G.L. wrote the paper.
Edited* by W. Ford Doolittle, Dalhousie University, Halifax, NS, Canada, and approved May 17, 2010 (received for review February 2, 2010)
ISSN:0027-8424
1091-6490
1091-6490
DOI:10.1073/pnas.1001291107