Inferring Phenotypic Trait Evolution on Large Trees With Many Incomplete Measurements.

J Am Stat Assoc

Department of Biomathematics, David Geffen School of Medicine at UCLA, University of California, Los Angeles, United States.

Published: September 2020

Comparative biologists are often interested in inferring covariation between multiple biological traits sampled across numerous related taxa. To properly study these relationships, we must control for the shared evolutionary history of the taxa to avoid spurious inference. An additional challenge arises as obtaining a full suite of measurements becomes increasingly difficult with increasing taxa. This generally necessitates data imputation or integration, and existing control techniques typically scale poorly as the number of taxa increases. We propose an inference technique that integrates out missing measurements analytically and scales linearly with the number of taxa by using a post-order traversal algorithm under a multivariate Brownian diffusion (MBD) model to characterize trait evolution. We further exploit this technique to extend the MBD model to account for sampling error or non-heritable residual variance. We test these methods to examine mammalian life history traits, prokaryotic genomic and phenotypic traits, and HIV infection traits. We find computational efficiency increases that top two orders-of-magnitude over current best practices. While we focus on the utility of this algorithm in phylogenetic comparative methods, our approach generalizes to solve long-standing challenges in computing the likelihood for matrix-normal and multivariate normal distributions with missing data at scale.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9438787PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/01621459.2020.1799812DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

trait evolution
8
number taxa
8
mbd model
8
taxa
5
inferring phenotypic
4
phenotypic trait
4
evolution large
4
large trees
4
trees incomplete
4
incomplete measurements
4

Similar Publications

The remarkable diversity of insect pigmentation offers a captivating avenue for studying evolution and genetics. In tephritids, understanding the molecular basis of mutant traits is also crucial for applied entomology, enabling the creation of genetic sexing strains through genome editing, thus facilitating sex-sorting before sterile insect releases. Here, we present evidence from classical and modern genetics showing that the black pupae (bp) phenotype in the GUA10 strain of Anastrepha ludens is caused by a large deletion at the ebony locus, removing the gene's entire coding region.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

A growing body of theoretical studies and laboratory experiments has focused attention on reciprocal feedbacks between ecological and evolutionary processes. However, uncertainty remains about whether such eco-evolutionary feedbacks have an important or negligible influence on natural communities. Thus, recent discussions call for field experiments that explore whether selection on phenotypic variation within populations leads to contemporaneous effects on community dynamics.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Identification, characterization and expression analysis of lineage-specific genes within 'Zhongyoutao 14' peach (Prunus persica).

Gene

January 2025

College of Horticulture, Henan Agricultural University, Zhengzhou, China; Henan Engineering and Technology Center for Peach Germplasm Innovation and Utilization, Zhengzhou, China; International Joint Laboratory of Henan Horticultural Crop Biology, Zhengzhou, China. Electronic address:

Background: With the development of sequencing technology and the rapid increasing in the number of sequenced genomes, lineage-specific genes (LSGs) have been identified and characterized across various species. Similar to other conserved functional genes, LSGs play a crucial role in biological evolution and development. However, the understanding of LSGs remains limited.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Coral persistence in the Anthropocene depends on interactions among holobiont partners (coral animals and microbial symbionts) and their environment. Cryptic coral lineages-genetically distinct yet morphologically similar groups-are critically important as they often exhibit functional diversity relevant to thermal tolerance. In addition, environmental parameters such as thermal variability may promote tolerance, but how variability interacts with holobiont partners to shape responses to thermal challenge remains unclear.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Although we have a good understanding of how phenotypic plasticity evolves in response to abiotic environments, we know comparatively less about responses to biotic interactions. We experimentally tested how competition and mutualism affected trait and plasticity evolution of pairwise communities of genetically modified brewer's yeast. We quantified evolutionary changes in growth rate, resource use efficiency (RUE), and their plasticity in strains evolving alone, with a competitor, and with a mutualist.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!