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1.
PLoS One ; 13(4): e0195034, 2018.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29668710

ABSTRACT

Previous molecular phylogenetic analyses have resolved the Australian bloodwood eucalypt genus Corymbia (~100 species) as either monophyletic or paraphyletic with respect to Angophora (9-10 species). Here we assess relationships of Corymbia and Angophora using a large dataset of chloroplast DNA sequences (121,016 base pairs; from 90 accessions representing 55 Corymbia and 8 Angophora species, plus 33 accessions of related genera), skimmed from high throughput sequencing of genomic DNA, and compare results with new analyses of nuclear ITS sequences (119 accessions) from previous studies. Maximum likelihood and maximum parsimony analyses of cpDNA resolve well supported trees with most nodes having >95% bootstrap support. These trees strongly reject monophyly of Corymbia, its two subgenera (Corymbia and Blakella), most taxonomic sections (Abbreviatae, Maculatae, Naviculares, Septentrionales), and several species. ITS trees weakly indicate paraphyly of Corymbia (bootstrap support <50% for maximum likelihood, and 71% for parsimony), but are highly incongruent with the cpDNA analyses, in that they support monophyly of both subgenera and some taxonomic sections of Corymbia. The striking incongruence between cpDNA trees and both morphological taxonomy and ITS trees is attributed largely to chloroplast introgression between taxa, because of geographic sharing of chloroplast clades across taxonomic groups. Such introgression has been widely inferred in studies of the related genus Eucalyptus. This is the first report of its likely prevalence in Corymbia and Angophora, but this is consistent with previous morphological inferences of hybridisation between species. Our findings (based on continent-wide sampling) highlight a need for more focussed studies to assess the extent of hybridisation and introgression in the evolutionary history of these genera, and that critical testing of the classification of Corymbia and Angophora requires additional sequence data from nuclear genomes.


Subject(s)
DNA, Chloroplast/genetics , Genetic Variation , Myrtaceae/classification , Myrtaceae/genetics , Australia , DNA, Ribosomal/genetics , Phylogeny , Phylogeography , Plant Leaves/genetics , Sequence Analysis, DNA
2.
Mitochondrial DNA B Resour ; 3(1): 399-400, 2018 Mar 27.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33474182

ABSTRACT

We assembled the plastome of the temperate, Southern Hemisphere liana Muehlenbeckia australis from high throughput sequencing data (paired-end Illumina reads) generated from total genomic DNA sequencing libraries. M. australis' chloroplast genome sequence (GenBank: MG604297) is 163,484 bp in length and composed of long single copy (LSC; 88,166 bp) and short single copy (SSC; 13,486 bp) regions flanked by inverted repeats (IR; 30,916 bp each) typical for angiosperms. The plastome includes 131 genes comprising 83 protein-coding genes, 37 transfer RNA genes, eight ribosomal RNA genes, two possible pseudogenes, psbL and rpl23 with internal stop codons, and truncated repeats of ndhF and rps19 at IR boundaries.

3.
PLoS One ; 8(4): e61261, 2013.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23585884

ABSTRACT

The buckwheat family Polygonaceae is a diverse group of plants and is a good model for investigating biogeography, breeding systems, coevolution with symbionts such as ants and fungi, functional trait evolution, hybridization, invasiveness, morphological plasticity, pollen morphology and wood anatomy. The main goal of this study was to obtain age estimates for Polygonaceae by calibrating a Bayesian phylogenetic analysis, using a relaxed molecular clock with fossil data. Based on the age estimates, we also develop hypotheses about the historical biogeography of the Southern Hemisphere group Muehlenbeckia. We are interested in addressing whether vicariance or dispersal could account for the diversification of Muehlenbeckia, which has a "Gondwanan" distribution. Eighty-one species of Polygonaceae were analysed with MrBayes to infer species relationships. One nuclear (nrITS) and three chloroplast markers (the trnL-trnF spacer region, matK and ndhF genes) were used. The molecular data were also analysed with Beast to estimate divergence times. Seven calibration points including fossil pollen and a leaf fossil of Muehlenbeckia were used to infer node ages. Results of the Beast analyses indicate an age of 110.9 (exponential/lognormal priors)/118.7 (uniform priors) million years (Myr) with an uncertainty interval of (90.7-125.0) Myr for the stem age of Polygonaceae. This age is older than previously thought (Maastrichtian, approximately 65.5-70.6 Myr). The estimated divergence time for Muehlenbeckia is 41.0/41.6 (39.6-47.8) Myr and its crown clade is 20.5/22.3 (14.2-33.5) Myr old. Because the breakup of Gondwana occurred from 95-30 Myr ago, diversification of Muehlenbeckia is best explained by oceanic long-distance and maybe stepping-stone dispersal rather than vicariance. This study is the first to give age estimates for clades of Polygonaceae and functions as a jumping-off point for future studies on the historical biogeography of the family.


Subject(s)
Evolution, Molecular , Fossils , Polygonaceae/genetics , Bayes Theorem , Chloroplasts/genetics , Genes, Plant , Phylogeny , Polygonaceae/classification
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