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Phylogenetic relationships and heterogeneous evolutionary processes among phrynosomatine sand lizards (Squamata, Iguanidae) revisited.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2008 May; 47(2):700-16.MP

Abstract

Phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences were conducted to evaluate four alternative hypotheses of phrynosomatine sand lizard relationships. Sequences comprising 2871 aligned base pair positions representing the regions spanning ND1-COI and cyt b-tRNA(Thr) of the mitochondrial genome from all recognized sand lizard species were analyzed using unpartitioned parsimony and likelihood methods, likelihood methods with assumed partitions, Bayesian methods with assumed partitions, and Bayesian mixture models. The topology (Uma, (Callisaurus, (Cophosaurus, Holbrookia))) and thus monophyly of the "earless" taxa, Cophosaurus and Holbrookia, is supported by all analyses. Previously proposed topologies in which Uma and Callisaurus are sister taxa and those in which Holbrookia is the sister group to all other sand lizard taxa are rejected using both parsimony and likelihood-based significance tests with the combined, unparitioned data set. Bayesian hypothesis tests also reject those topologies using six assumed partitioning strategies, and the two partitioning strategies presumably associated with the most powerful tests also reject a third previously proposed topology, in which Callisaurus and Cophosaurus are sister taxa. For both maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods with assumed partitions, those partitions defined by codon position and tRNA stem and nonstems explained the data better than other strategies examined. Bayes factor estimates comparing results of assumed partitions versus mixture models suggest that mixture models perform better than assumed partitions when the latter were not based on functional characteristics of the data, such as codon position and tRNA stem and nonstems. However, assumed partitions performed better than mixture models when functional differences were incorporated. We reiterate the importance of accounting for heterogeneous evolutionary processes in the analysis of complex data sets and emphasize the importance of implementing mixed model likelihood methods.

Authors+Show Affiliations

Division of Amphibians and Reptiles, Smithsonian Institution, P.O. Box 37012, MRC 162, Washington, DC 20013-7012, USA. jschulte@clarkson.eduNo affiliation info available

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article
Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

Language

eng

PubMed ID

18362078

Citation

Schulte, James A., and Kevin de Queiroz. "Phylogenetic Relationships and Heterogeneous Evolutionary Processes Among Phrynosomatine Sand Lizards (Squamata, Iguanidae) Revisited." Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, vol. 47, no. 2, 2008, pp. 700-16.
Schulte JA, de Queiroz K. Phylogenetic relationships and heterogeneous evolutionary processes among phrynosomatine sand lizards (Squamata, Iguanidae) revisited. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2008;47(2):700-16.
Schulte, J. A., & de Queiroz, K. (2008). Phylogenetic relationships and heterogeneous evolutionary processes among phrynosomatine sand lizards (Squamata, Iguanidae) revisited. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 47(2), 700-16. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2008.01.010
Schulte JA, de Queiroz K. Phylogenetic Relationships and Heterogeneous Evolutionary Processes Among Phrynosomatine Sand Lizards (Squamata, Iguanidae) Revisited. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2008;47(2):700-16. PubMed PMID: 18362078.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Phylogenetic relationships and heterogeneous evolutionary processes among phrynosomatine sand lizards (Squamata, Iguanidae) revisited. AU - Schulte,James A,2nd AU - de Queiroz,Kevin, Y1 - 2008/01/24/ PY - 2007/08/08/received PY - 2007/12/03/revised PY - 2008/01/11/accepted PY - 2008/3/26/pubmed PY - 2008/7/19/medline PY - 2008/3/26/entrez SP - 700 EP - 16 JF - Molecular phylogenetics and evolution JO - Mol Phylogenet Evol VL - 47 IS - 2 N2 - Phylogenetic analyses of DNA sequences were conducted to evaluate four alternative hypotheses of phrynosomatine sand lizard relationships. Sequences comprising 2871 aligned base pair positions representing the regions spanning ND1-COI and cyt b-tRNA(Thr) of the mitochondrial genome from all recognized sand lizard species were analyzed using unpartitioned parsimony and likelihood methods, likelihood methods with assumed partitions, Bayesian methods with assumed partitions, and Bayesian mixture models. The topology (Uma, (Callisaurus, (Cophosaurus, Holbrookia))) and thus monophyly of the "earless" taxa, Cophosaurus and Holbrookia, is supported by all analyses. Previously proposed topologies in which Uma and Callisaurus are sister taxa and those in which Holbrookia is the sister group to all other sand lizard taxa are rejected using both parsimony and likelihood-based significance tests with the combined, unparitioned data set. Bayesian hypothesis tests also reject those topologies using six assumed partitioning strategies, and the two partitioning strategies presumably associated with the most powerful tests also reject a third previously proposed topology, in which Callisaurus and Cophosaurus are sister taxa. For both maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods with assumed partitions, those partitions defined by codon position and tRNA stem and nonstems explained the data better than other strategies examined. Bayes factor estimates comparing results of assumed partitions versus mixture models suggest that mixture models perform better than assumed partitions when the latter were not based on functional characteristics of the data, such as codon position and tRNA stem and nonstems. However, assumed partitions performed better than mixture models when functional differences were incorporated. We reiterate the importance of accounting for heterogeneous evolutionary processes in the analysis of complex data sets and emphasize the importance of implementing mixed model likelihood methods. SN - 1055-7903 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/18362078/Phylogenetic_relationships_and_heterogeneous_evolutionary_processes_among_phrynosomatine_sand_lizards__Squamata_Iguanidae__revisited_ DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -