Dan Graur - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 74
About This Presentation
Title:

Dan Graur

Description:

ancestor ... ancestor. descendant 1. descendant 2. Anagenesis = changes occurring along an ... A taxon whose common ancestor is shared by any other ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:51
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 75
Provided by: nsm5
Category:
Tags: ancestor | dan | graur

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Dan Graur


1
Molecular Phylogenetics
  • Dan Graur

2
Objectives of molecular phylogenetics
  • Reconstruct the correct evolutionary
    relationships among biological entities
  • Estimate the time of divergence between
    biological entities
  • Chronicle the sequence of events along
    evolutionary lineages

3
Evolutionary relationships are illustrated by
means of a phylogenetic tree or a dendogram.
4
Ernst Heinrich Haeckel 1834-1919
1/3
5
2/3
6
3/3
7
(No Transcript)
8
July 1837
9
July 2007
10
November 1859
11
The routes of inheritance represent the passage
of genes from parents to offspring, and the
branching pattern depicts a gene tree.
12
Different genes, however, may have different
evolutionary histories, i.e., different routes of
inheritance.
13
The routes of inheritance are confined by
reproductive barriers, i.e., gene flow occurs
only within a species. A species tree is a
representation of splitting of species lineages.
14
Terminology
15
A phylogenetic tree or dendrogram is a graph
composed of nodes and branches, in which only one
branch connects any two adjacent nodes.
16
Internal
External or Peripheral Branch
17
(No Transcript)
18
Assumptions Bifurcation Real speciation
event Multifurcation Lack of resolution
19
Binary tree
20
Rooted and unrooted trees
21
How many unrooted topologies are here?
a
b
d
d
2
1
b
a
e
e
c
c
a
c
e
e
4
3
a
b
d
d
b
c
22
In an unrooted tree with four external nodes, the
internal branch is referred to as the central
branch.
23
Cladograms Phylograms(collectively Dendograms)
24
Unscaled phylogram
Scaled phylogram
25
(No Transcript)
26
(No Transcript)
27
3 OTUs
1 unrooted tree 3 rooted trees
28
4 OTUs
3 unrooted trees 15 rooted trees
29
The number of possible bifurcating rooted trees
(NR) for n ? 2 OTUs
The number of possible bifurcating unrooted trees
(NU) for n ? 3 OTUs
30
¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾ Number of OTUs Number
of possible rooted tree ¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾
2 1 3 3 4 15 5 105 6
954 7 10,395 8 135,135 9 2,0
27,025 10 34,459,425 15 213,458,046,67
6,875 20 8,200,794,532,637,891,559,375 ¾¾¾¾¾
¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾¾
31
Evolution is an historical process. Only one
historical narrative is true. From
8,200,794,532,637,891,559,375 possibilities, 1
possibility is true and 8,200,794,532,637,891,559,
374 are false. Truth is one, falsehoods are many.
32
How do we know which of the 8,200,794,532,637,891,
559,375 trees is true?
33
We dont, we infer by using decision criteria.
34
True and inferred trees The sequence of
speciation events that has led to the formation
of a group of OTUs is historically unique. A tree
representing the true evolutionary history is
called the true tree. A tree that is obtained
by using a certain set of data and a certain
method of tree reconstruction is called an
inferred tree. An inferred tree may or may not
be the true tree.
35
Cladogenesis the splitting of an evolutionary
lineage into two genetically
independent lineages.
36
Anagenesis changes occurring along an
evolutionary lineage.
37
In molecular phylogenetics, we assume that
species are only created by cladogenesis.
38
A gene tree may differ from a species tree
39
Gene trees and species trees
A
a
Species tree
Gene tree
B
b
D
c
It is often assumed that gene trees always equal
species trees. This may be not be true.
40
Orthologs and paralogs
paralogous
A
C
b
orthologous
orthologous
A
c
B
C
a
b
A mixture of orthologs and paralogs is sampled
Duplication yields 2 copies (paralogs) on the
same genome
Ancestral gene
41
(No Transcript)
42
Taxon (singular) Taxa (plural)
A taxon is a species or a group of species that
has been given a name, e.g., Homo sapiens (modern
humans) or Lepidoptera (butterflies). There are
codes of biological nomenclature which seek to
ensure that every taxon has a single and stable
name, and that every name is used for only one
taxon.
43
Clades
  • Strictly A clade is a group of all the taxa that
    have been derived from a common ancestor plus the
    common ancestor itself.
  • In molecular phylogenetics A clade is a group of
    taxa under study that share a common ancestor,
    which is not shared by any other species outside
    the group.

also monophyletic groups, natural clades
44
Paraphyletic Taxa
  • A taxon whose common ancestor is shared by any
    other taxon is called a paraphyletic taxon or an
    invalid taxon.

Reptiles are paraphyletic.
44
45
  • A named taxon that lacks phylogenetic validity,
    but is nonetheless used, is called a convenience
    taxon.

a convenience fish
46
Sister Taxa
  • If a clade is composed of two taxa, these are
    referred to as sister taxa.

Birds and crocodiles are sister taxa.
47
(No Transcript)
48
Which of the following groups are not
monophyletic?
E. coli
mouse
baboon
rat
human
chimp
a. human, chimpanzee, baboon b. mouse,
chimpanzee, baboon c. rat, mouse d. human,
chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse e. E. coli, human,
chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse
49
Which of the following groups are not
monophyletic?
E. coli
mouse
baboon
rat
human
chimp
a. human, chimpanzee, baboon b. mouse,
chimpanzee, baboon c. rat, mouse d. human,
chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse e. E. coli, human,
chimpanzee, baboon, rat, mouse
50
(No Transcript)
51
A character provides information about an
individual OTU. A distance represents a
quantitative statement concerning the
dissimilarity between two OTUs.
52
A character is a well-defined feature that in a
taxonomic unit can assume one out of two or more
mutually exclusive character states.
Mutually exclusive If David is tall, David
cannot be short.
53
(No Transcript)
54
(No Transcript)
55
Character
Continuous
Discrete
Binary
Multistate
Unordered
Ordered
Unpolar
Polar
56
A character is unordered if a change from one
character state to any other character state can
occur in one step.
57
A character is ordered if there exists a unique
symmetrical path of change from one character
state to another.
58
A character is polar if there exists a unique
asymmetrical (irreversible) path of change from
one character state to another.
Polar
59
In partially ordered characters the number of
steps varies for the different pairwise
combinations of character states, but no definite
relationship exists between the number of steps
and the character-state. Amino-acid sites are
partially ordered characters. An amino acid
cannot change into all other amino acids in a
singe step, as sometimes 2 or 3 steps are
required. For example, a tyrosine may only
change into a leucine through an intermediate
state, i.e., phenylalanine or histidine.
60
The number of steps in partially ordered
characters is specified by a step matrix, the
elements of which indicate the number of steps
required between any two character states
61
(No Transcript)
62
Assumptions about character evolution Methods of
phylogenetic reconstruction require that we make
explicit assumptions about (1) the number of
discrete steps required for one character state
to change into another. (2) the probability
with which such a change may occur.
63
Temporal Polarity of Character States Character
states may be ranked by relative antiquity
into (1) primitive or ancestral
(plesiomorphy) (2) derived or novel (apomorphy)
64
Taxonomic Distribution of Character States A
primitive state that is shared by several taxa is
a symplesiomorphy. A derived state that is
shared by several taxa is a synapomorphy. A
derived character state unique to a particular
taxon is an autapomorphy. A character state
that is shared by several taxa due to
convergence, parallelism and reversals, rather
than due to common descent, is a homoplasy.
sympathy synapse
65
homoplasy
apomorphy (autapomorphy)
synapomorphy
symplesiomorphy
D
C
C
B
A
A
B
A
C
A
A
A
plesiomorphy
A
66
(No Transcript)
67
Distance Data
68
(No Transcript)
69
Most molecular data yield character states that
are subsequently converted into distances.
70
Some molecular data can only be expressed as
distances.
71
(No Transcript)
72
(No Transcript)
73
(No Transcript)
74
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com