Gene, Vol. 410, pp. 89-96
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Introns outperform exons in analyses of basal avian phylogeny
using clathrin heavy chain genes
Jena
L. Chojnowski, Rebecca T. Kimball and Edward L. Braun*
Department of Zoology, 223 Bartram Hall, University of
Florida, Gainesville, FL 32611, USA. (All authors)
Neoaves is the most diverse major avian clade,
containing ~95% of avian species, and it underwent an ancient but rapid
diversification that has made resolution of relationships at the base
of the clade difficult. In fact, Neoaves has been suggested to be a
"hard" polytomy that cannot be resolved with any amount of data.
However, this conclusion was based on slowly evolving coding sequences
and ribosomal RNAs and some recent studies using more rapidly evolving
intron sequences have suggested some resolution at the base of Neoaves.
To further examine the utility of introns and exons for phylogenetics,
we sequenced parts of two unlinked clathrin heavy chain genes (CLTC and
CLTCL1). Comparisons of phylogenetic trees based upon individual
partitions (i.e. introns and exons), the combined dataset, and
published phylogenies using Robinson-Foulds distances (a metric of
topological differences) revealed more similarity than expected by
chance, suggesting there is structure at the base of Neoaves. We found
that introns provided more informative sites, were subject to less
homoplasy, and provided better support for well-accepted clades,
suggesting that intron evolution is better suited to determining
closely-spaced branching events like the base of Neoaves. Furthermore,
phylogenetic power analyses indicated that existing molecular datasets
for birds are unlikely to provide sufficient phylogenetic information
to resolve relationships at the base of Neoaves, especially when
comprised of exon or other slowly evolving regions. Although
relationships among the orders in Neoaves cannot be definitively
established using available data, the base of Neoaves does not appear
to represent a hard polytomy. Our analyses suggest that large intron
datasets have the best potential to resolve relationships among avian
orders and indicate that the utility of intron data for other
phylogenetic questions should be examined.
This work was supported by the National Science Foundation
"Assembling the Tree of Life" program (DEB-0228617, DEB-0228675,
DEB-0228682, and DEB-0228688).
* Corresponding author