Phylogenetic studies

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Phylogenetic studies

Transcript of Phylogenetic studies

Page 1: Phylogenetic studies

Phylogenetic studies

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Problems in Phylogenetics

Fossil records are sporadic and less reliable

Only available data is genetic data

How evolution operates is used in the tree construction

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Phylogenetics

Study of evolutionary relatedness among various groups of organisms

Basis:Molecular sequencingMorphological data

*** Molecular data, protein and DNA sequences is the basis for present methods

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Major assumptions

Sequences are homologous

Phylogenetic divergence is bifurcating

Each position in sequence evolved independently

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Phylogenetic tree

Tree showing the evolutionary relationships among various biological species or other entities that are known to have a common ancestry

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Types of Phylogenetic trees

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Types of Phylogenetic trees

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Types of Phylogenetic trees

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Types of Phylogenetic trees

Rooted and Unrooted

Bifurcating & Multifurcating

Labeled & Unlabeled

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Types of Phylogenetic trees

NR – No. of Rooted trees NU – No. of Unrooted treesn – No. of Taxa

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Dendrogram

Cladogram

Phylogram

Chronogram or Ultrametric tree

Different representations

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Cladogram

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Monophyly

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Paraphyly

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Polyphyly

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1. Choosing molecular markers

2. Performing multiple sequence alignment

3. Choosing a model of evolution

4. Determining a tree building method

5. Assessing a tree reliability

Steps

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For very closely related organisms – Nucleotide sequences e.g., Noncoding regions of Mitochondrial DNA

For more divergent groups – Slowly evolving Nt sequences e.g., Ribosomal RNA Protein sequences

Choice of Molecular markers

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Choosing a model of evolution

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Distance-based methods – Based on distance (amount of dissimilarities) All sequences are homologous and tree branches are

additive

Character -based – Based on discrete characters (sequences) e.g., Ribosomal RNA Protein sequences

Tree building methods

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Clustering-based – Based on a distance matrix starting from the most

similar sequences1. UPGMA (Unweighted Pair Group Method using

Arithmetic Average): Sequential clusteringAssumption: All taxa have constant evolutionary rates

2. Neibour-joining Taxa are not equidistant from the root Uses conversion step

Distance-based

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Optimality based – Compare all possible tree topologies and select the best

1. Fitch-Margoliash: Sequential clusteringAssumption: All taxa have constant evolutionary rates

2. Neibour-joining Taxa are not equidistant from the root Uses conversion step

Distance-based

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Distance methods:-e.g. Neighbor joining, UPGMA clustering

Character-based:-e.g. Maximum parsimony, Maximum likelihood

Methods

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Efficiency

Power

Consistency

Falsifiability

Criteria for the selection