Resolving Marine-Freshwater Transitions by Diatoms Through a Fog of Gene Tree Discordance.

Syst Biol

Department of Biological Sciences, University of Arkansas, 1 University of Arkansas, Fayetteville, AR, 72701, USA.

Published: November 2023

AI Article Synopsis

  • Many marine organisms, like diatoms, have adapted and diversified in freshwater environments despite significant challenges, leading to changes in their physical and biological traits.
  • Researchers analyzed genomes from 59 diatom species to understand these freshwater transitions, revealing strong species relationships but difficulties in pinpointing specific evolutionary events, particularly in the Paleocene era.
  • The study found that many habitat changes appeared to arise from independent evolutionary developments (homoplasy), with some gene variations linked to low salinity adaptation, highlighting complex evolutionary patterns in freshwater adaptations among diatoms.

Article Abstract

Despite the obstacles facing marine colonists, most lineages of aquatic organisms have colonized and diversified in freshwaters repeatedly. These transitions can trigger rapid morphological or physiological change and, on longer timescales, lead to increased rates of speciation and extinction. Diatoms are a lineage of ancestrally marine microalgae that have diversified throughout freshwater habitats worldwide. We generated a phylogenomic data set of genomes and transcriptomes for 59 diatom taxa to resolve freshwater transitions in one lineage, the Thalassiosirales. Although most parts of the species tree were consistently resolved with strong support, we had difficulties resolving a Paleocene radiation, which affected the placement of one freshwater lineage. This and other parts of the tree were characterized by high levels of gene tree discordance caused by incomplete lineage sorting and low phylogenetic signal. Despite differences in species trees inferred from concatenation versus summary methods and codons versus amino acids, traditional methods of ancestral state reconstruction supported six transitions into freshwaters, two of which led to subsequent species diversification. Evidence from gene trees, protein alignments, and diatom life history together suggest that habitat transitions were largely the product of homoplasy rather than hemiplasy, a condition where transitions occur on branches in gene trees not shared with the species tree. Nevertheless, we identified a set of putatively hemiplasious genes, many of which have been associated with shifts to low salinity, indicating that hemiplasy played a small but potentially important role in freshwater adaptation. Accounting for differences in evolutionary outcomes, in which some taxa became locked into freshwaters while others were able to return to the ocean or become salinity generalists, might help further distinguish different sources of adaptive mutation in freshwater diatoms.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/sysbio/syad038DOI Listing

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