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Multilocus phylogeny of alligator lizards (Elgaria, Anguidae): Testing mtDNA introgression as the source of discordant molecular phylogenetic hypotheses.
Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017 05; 110:104-121.MP

Abstract

The increased availability of nuclear DNA sequence data has led to a better appreciation of the role and frequency of introgressive hybridization and subsequent mitochondrial capture in misleading phylogenetic hypotheses based on mtDNA sequence data alone. Relationships among members of the alligator lizard genus Elgaria have been addressed with morphology, allozyme and mtDNA sequence data with discordant results. In this study, we use seven nuclear loci (total of 5.9kb) and ∼3kb of mtDNA to infer the phylogenetic relationships among Elgaria species and test whether the discordance among previous phylogenetic hypotheses is due to introgression and mtDNA capture. While gene tree topologies varied among the different loci, we recovered a well-resolved coalescent-based species tree. Contrary to our expectations, the nDNA-only species tree does not support the sister relationship between E. kingii and E. panamintina inferred from the previous allozyme study. Nevertheless, we found evidence for possible mitochondrial capture in two unexpected situations. The first instance of mtDNA capture involves E. paucicarinata from the Cape Region of Baja California. MtDNA recovered a clade comprising E. paucicarinata and the other two peninsular endemics, while the nDNA-only species tree recovered E. paucicarinata as sister to the continental E. kingii. We hypothesize that this discordance is the result of ancient mitochondrial capture rather than incomplete lineage sorting. Additionally, analyses of nDNA recovered E. panamintina as sister to an E. multicarinata North lineage, whereas the mtDNA gene tree recovers E. panamintina nested within a southern E. multicarinata clade. We hypothesize that this discordance also may be due to mitochondrial capture. Additionally, hybridization between these two lineages may have resulted in geographically limited nuclear introgression. Divergence dating analyses suggest that oviparous Elgaria species diverged within a relatively narrow timeframe from the late Miocene to early Pliocene. We find that accounting for introgressed alleles is important when inferring phylogenetic relationships when using coalescent-based approaches.

Authors+Show Affiliations

San Diego State University, United States. Electronic address: dhleavitt@gmail.com.San Diego State University, United States.San Diego State University, United States; San Diego Natural History Museum, United States.San Diego State University, United States.

Pub Type(s)

Journal Article

Language

eng

PubMed ID

28212874

Citation

Leavitt, Dean H., et al. "Multilocus Phylogeny of Alligator Lizards (Elgaria, Anguidae): Testing mtDNA Introgression as the Source of Discordant Molecular Phylogenetic Hypotheses." Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, vol. 110, 2017, pp. 104-121.
Leavitt DH, Marion AB, Hollingsworth BD, et al. Multilocus phylogeny of alligator lizards (Elgaria, Anguidae): Testing mtDNA introgression as the source of discordant molecular phylogenetic hypotheses. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017;110:104-121.
Leavitt, D. H., Marion, A. B., Hollingsworth, B. D., & Reeder, T. W. (2017). Multilocus phylogeny of alligator lizards (Elgaria, Anguidae): Testing mtDNA introgression as the source of discordant molecular phylogenetic hypotheses. Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution, 110, 104-121. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2017.02.010
Leavitt DH, et al. Multilocus Phylogeny of Alligator Lizards (Elgaria, Anguidae): Testing mtDNA Introgression as the Source of Discordant Molecular Phylogenetic Hypotheses. Mol Phylogenet Evol. 2017;110:104-121. PubMed PMID: 28212874.
* Article titles in AMA citation format should be in sentence-case
TY - JOUR T1 - Multilocus phylogeny of alligator lizards (Elgaria, Anguidae): Testing mtDNA introgression as the source of discordant molecular phylogenetic hypotheses. AU - Leavitt,Dean H, AU - Marion,Angela B, AU - Hollingsworth,Bradford D, AU - Reeder,Tod W, Y1 - 2017/02/16/ PY - 2016/07/22/received PY - 2017/02/08/revised PY - 2017/02/12/accepted PY - 2017/2/19/pubmed PY - 2017/9/19/medline PY - 2017/2/19/entrez KW - Alligator lizards KW - Baja California KW - Discordance KW - Introgression KW - North America KW - Species tree SP - 104 EP - 121 JF - Molecular phylogenetics and evolution JO - Mol Phylogenet Evol VL - 110 N2 - The increased availability of nuclear DNA sequence data has led to a better appreciation of the role and frequency of introgressive hybridization and subsequent mitochondrial capture in misleading phylogenetic hypotheses based on mtDNA sequence data alone. Relationships among members of the alligator lizard genus Elgaria have been addressed with morphology, allozyme and mtDNA sequence data with discordant results. In this study, we use seven nuclear loci (total of 5.9kb) and ∼3kb of mtDNA to infer the phylogenetic relationships among Elgaria species and test whether the discordance among previous phylogenetic hypotheses is due to introgression and mtDNA capture. While gene tree topologies varied among the different loci, we recovered a well-resolved coalescent-based species tree. Contrary to our expectations, the nDNA-only species tree does not support the sister relationship between E. kingii and E. panamintina inferred from the previous allozyme study. Nevertheless, we found evidence for possible mitochondrial capture in two unexpected situations. The first instance of mtDNA capture involves E. paucicarinata from the Cape Region of Baja California. MtDNA recovered a clade comprising E. paucicarinata and the other two peninsular endemics, while the nDNA-only species tree recovered E. paucicarinata as sister to the continental E. kingii. We hypothesize that this discordance is the result of ancient mitochondrial capture rather than incomplete lineage sorting. Additionally, analyses of nDNA recovered E. panamintina as sister to an E. multicarinata North lineage, whereas the mtDNA gene tree recovers E. panamintina nested within a southern E. multicarinata clade. We hypothesize that this discordance also may be due to mitochondrial capture. Additionally, hybridization between these two lineages may have resulted in geographically limited nuclear introgression. Divergence dating analyses suggest that oviparous Elgaria species diverged within a relatively narrow timeframe from the late Miocene to early Pliocene. We find that accounting for introgressed alleles is important when inferring phylogenetic relationships when using coalescent-based approaches. SN - 1095-9513 UR - https://www.unboundmedicine.com/medline/citation/28212874/Multilocus_phylogeny_of_alligator_lizards__Elgaria_Anguidae_:_Testing_mtDNA_introgression_as_the_source_of_discordant_molecular_phylogenetic_hypotheses_ L2 - https://linkinghub.elsevier.com/retrieve/pii/S1055-7903(17)30136-7 DB - PRIME DP - Unbound Medicine ER -