AI Article Synopsis

  • Advances in sequencing technologies have generated vast genomic data, paving the way for constructing a detailed Tree of Life, but gene tree heterogeneity complicates species tree estimation.
  • New methods have been developed to address this gene tree heterogeneity and have shown statistical consistency under increasing loci and site numbers.
  • However, when the sequence length per locus is limited, common species tree estimation methods can become biased and unreliable, revealing a significant challenge for researchers in this field.

Article Abstract

With advances in sequencing technologies, there are now massive amounts of genomic data from across all life, leading to the possibility that a robust Tree of Life can be constructed. However, "gene tree heterogeneity", which is when different genomic regions can evolve differently, is a common phenomenon in multi-locus data sets, and reduces the accuracy of standard methods for species tree estimation that do not take this heterogeneity into account. New methods have been developed for species tree estimation that specifically address gene tree heterogeneity, and that have been proven to converge to the true species tree when the number of loci and number of sites per locus both increase (i.e., the methods are said to be "statistically consistent"). Yet, little is known about the biologically realistic condition where the number of sites per locus is bounded. We show that when the sequence length of each locus is bounded (by any arbitrarily chosen value), the most common approaches to species tree estimation that take heterogeneity into account (i.e., traditional fully partitioned concatenated maximum likelihood and newer approaches, called summary methods, that estimate the species tree by combining estimated gene trees) are not statistically consistent, even when the heterogeneity is extremely constrained. The main challenge is the presence of conditions such as long branch attraction that create biased tree estimation when the number of sites is restricted. Hence, our study uncovers a fundamental challenge to species tree estimation using both traditional and new methods.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syy061DOI Listing

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