Multilocus inference of species trees and DNA barcoding.

Philos Trans R Soc Lond B Biol Sci

Department of Biochemistry, Genetics and Immunology, University of Vigo, Vigo 36310, Spain.

Published: September 2016

AI Article Synopsis

  • The rise of next-generation sequencing has led to large, complex datasets that reveal significant phylogenetic inconsistencies across different genomic regions.
  • Despite the expectation that more data would clarify species relationships, issues like incomplete lineage sorting and gene transfer complicate our understanding.
  • The review discusses the challenges of using multilocus data for phylogenetic analysis, highlighting the need for improved barcoding methods that incorporate multiple loci to better align gene and species histories.

Article Abstract

The unprecedented amount of data resulting from next-generation sequencing has opened a new era in phylogenetic estimation. Although large datasets should, in theory, increase phylogenetic resolution, massive, multilocus datasets have uncovered a great deal of phylogenetic incongruence among different genomic regions, due both to stochastic error and to the action of different evolutionary process such as incomplete lineage sorting, gene duplication and loss and horizontal gene transfer. This incongruence violates one of the fundamental assumptions of the DNA barcoding approach, which assumes that gene history and species history are identical. In this review, we explain some of the most important challenges we will have to face to reconstruct the history of species, and the advantages and disadvantages of different strategies for the phylogenetic analysis of multilocus data. In particular, we describe the evolutionary events that can generate species tree-gene tree discordance, compare the most popular methods for species tree reconstruction, highlight the challenges we need to face when using them and discuss their potential utility in barcoding. Current barcoding methods sacrifice a great amount of statistical power by only considering one locus, and a transition to multilocus barcodes would not only improve current barcoding methods, but also facilitate an eventual transition to species-tree-based barcoding strategies, which could better accommodate scenarios where the barcode gap is too small or inexistent.This article is part of the themed issue 'From DNA barcodes to biomes'.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4971187PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1098/rstb.2015.0335DOI Listing

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