Am. J. Bot.
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(American Journal of Botany. 2007;94:1003-1016.)
© 2007 Botanical Society of America, Inc.


Systematics and Phytogeography

Ancient paralogy in the cpDNA trnL-F region in Annonaceae: implications for plant molecular systematics1

Michael D. Pirie, Maria Paula Balcázar Vargas, Marleen Botermans, Freek T. Bakker and Lars W. Chatrou

Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Universiteit Utrecht branch, Heidelberglaan 2, 3584 CS Utrecht, Netherlands; and 3Nationaal Herbarium Nederland, Wageningen Universiteit branch, Generaal Foulkesweg 37, 6703 BL Wageningen, Netherlands

ABSTRACT

The plastid trnL-F region has proved useful in molecular phylogenetic studies addressing diverse evolutionary questions from biogeographic history to character evolution in a broad range of plant groups. An important assumption for phylogenetic reconstruction is that data used in combined analyses contain the same phylogenetic signal. The trnL-F region is often used in combined analyses of multiple chloroplast markers. These markers are assumed to contain congruent phylogenetic signal due to lack of recombination. Here we show that trnL-F sequences display a phylogenetic signal conflicting with that of other chloroplast markers in Annonaceae, and we demonstrate that this conflict results from ancient paralogy. TrnL-F copy 2 diverged from trnL-F copy 1 (as used in family-wide phylogenetic analyses) in a direct ancestor of the Annonaceae. Although this divergence dates back 88 million years or more, the exons of both copies appear to be intact. In this case, assuming that (putative) chloroplast markers contain the same phylogenetic signal results in an incorrect topology and an incorrect estimate of ages. Our study demonstrates that researchers should be cautious when interpreting gene phylogenies, irrespective of the genome from which they are presumed to have been sampled.

Key Words: Annonaceae • chloroplast DNA sequences • conflict • molecular dating • paralogy • phylogeny reconstruction • trnL-F







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