Plastid genomes reveal support for deep phylogenetic relationships and extensive rate variation among palms and other commelinid monocots.

Resource Type: 
Publication
Publication Type: 
Journal Article
Title: 
Plastid genomes reveal support for deep phylogenetic relationships and extensive rate variation among palms and other commelinid monocots.
Authors: 
Barrett CF, Baker WJ, Comer JR, Conran JG, Lahmeyer SC, Leebens-Mack JH, Li J, Lim GS, Mayfield-Jones DR, Perez L, Medina J, Pires JC, Santos C, Wm Stevenson D, Zomlefer WB, Davis JI
Series Name: 
The New phytologist
Journal Abbreviation: 
New Phytol
Volume: 
209
Issue: 
2
Page Numbers: 
855-70
Publication Year: 
2016
Publication Date: 
2016 Jan
DOI: 
10.1111/nph.13617
ISSN: 
1469-8137
EISSN: 
1469-8137
Cross Reference: 
PMIDLoading content
Citation: 
Barrett CF, Baker WJ, Comer JR, Conran JG, Lahmeyer SC, Leebens-Mack JH, Li J, Lim GS, Mayfield-Jones DR, Perez L, Medina J, Pires JC, Santos C, Wm Stevenson D, Zomlefer WB, Davis JI. Plastid genomes reveal support for deep phylogenetic relationships and extensive rate variation among palms and other commelinid monocots.. The New phytologist. 2016 Jan; 209(2):855-70.
Abstract: 

Despite progress based on multilocus, phylogenetic studies of the palms (order Arecales, family Arecaceae), uncertainty remains in resolution/support among major clades and for the placement of the palms among the commelinid monocots. Palms and related commelinids represent a classic case of substitution rate heterogeneity that has not been investigated in the genomic era. To address questions of relationships, support and rate variation among palms and commelinid relatives, 39 plastomes representing the palms and related family Dasypogonaceae were generated via genome skimming and integrated within a monocot-wide matrix for phylogenetic and molecular evolutionary analyses. Support was strong for 'deep' relationships among the commelinid orders, among the five palm subfamilies, and among tribes of the subfamily Coryphoideae. Additionally, there was extreme heterogeneity in the plastid substitution rates across the commelinid orders indicated by model based analyses, with c. 22 rate shifts, and significant departure from a global clock. To date, this study represents the most comprehensively sampled matrix of plastomes assembled for monocot angiosperms, providing genome-scale support for phylogenetic relationships of monocot angiosperms, and lays the phylogenetic groundwork for comparative analyses of the drivers and correlates of such drastic differences in substitution rates across a diverse and significant clade.

Publication Model: 
Print-Electronic
Language: 
English
Language Abbr: 
eng
Journal Country: 
England