Introduction to characters and parsimony analysis

Similar documents
Phylogenetic methods in molecular systematics

Phylogenetic Analysis

Phylogenetic Analysis

Phylogenetic Analysis

How should we organize the diversity of animal life?

Phylogenies & Classifying species (AKA Cladistics & Taxonomy) What are phylogenies & cladograms? How do we read them? How do we estimate them?

Systematics - BIO 615

Phylogeny 9/8/2014. Evolutionary Relationships. Data Supporting Phylogeny. Chapter 26

Amira A. AL-Hosary PhD of infectious diseases Department of Animal Medicine (Infectious Diseases) Faculty of Veterinary Medicine Assiut

8/23/2014. Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

Classification, Phylogeny yand Evolutionary History

UoN, CAS, DBSC BIOL102 lecture notes by: Dr. Mustafa A. Mansi. The Phylogenetic Systematics (Phylogeny and Systematics)

Reconstructing the history of lineages

Classification and Phylogeny

Phylogeny & Systematics: The Tree of Life

Dr. Amira A. AL-Hosary

Classification and Phylogeny

What is Phylogenetics

Anatomy of a tree. clade is group of organisms with a shared ancestor. a monophyletic group shares a single common ancestor = tapirs-rhinos-horses

Macroevolution Part I: Phylogenies

Chapter 26 Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

Chapter 19: Taxonomy, Systematics, and Phylogeny

1/27/2010. Systematics and Phylogenetics of the. An Introduction. Taxonomy and Systematics

Introduction to Biosystematics - Zool 575

Chapter 26: Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

PHYLOGENY & THE TREE OF LIFE

Patterns of Evolution

Classifications can be based on groupings g within a phylogeny

Lecture 6 Phylogenetic Inference

Organizing Life s Diversity

C3020 Molecular Evolution. Exercises #3: Phylogenetics

Lecture 11 Friday, October 21, 2011

1. Construct and use dichotomous keys to identify organisms.

Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

ESS 345 Ichthyology. Systematic Ichthyology Part II Not in Book

POPULATION GENETICS Winter 2005 Lecture 17 Molecular phylogenetics

CLASSIFICATION OF LIVING THINGS. Chapter 18

Lecture V Phylogeny and Systematics Dr. Kopeny

Biology 211 (2) Week 1 KEY!

Chapter 26: Phylogeny and the Tree of Life Phylogenies Show Evolutionary Relationships

--Therefore, congruence among all postulated homologies provides a test of any single character in question [the central epistemological advance].

Multiple Sequence Alignment. Sequences

Homework Assignment, Evolutionary Systems Biology, Spring Homework Part I: Phylogenetics:

A Phylogenetic Network Construction due to Constrained Recombination

Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

How to read and make phylogenetic trees Zuzana Starostová

C.DARWIN ( )

Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

BIOLOGY. Phylogeny and the Tree of Life CAMPBELL. Reece Urry Cain Wasserman Minorsky Jackson

Chapter 19 Organizing Information About Species: Taxonomy and Cladistics

20 Phylogeny CAMPBELL BIOLOGY IN FOCUS. Urry Cain Wasserman Minorsky Jackson Reece. Lecture Presentations by Kathleen Fitzpatrick and Nicole Tunbridge

Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

Biologists have used many approaches to estimating the evolutionary history of organisms and using that history to construct classifications.

Cladistics and Bioinformatics Questions 2013

(Stevens 1991) 1. morphological characters should be assumed to be quantitative unless demonstrated otherwise

Phylogeny CAMPBELL BIOLOGY IN FOCUS SECOND EDITION URRY CAIN WASSERMAN MINORSKY REECE

AP Biology Notes Outline Enduring Understanding 1.B. Big Idea 1: The process of evolution drives the diversity and unity of life.

Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

GENETICS - CLUTCH CH.22 EVOLUTIONARY GENETICS.

Chapter 26 Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

Systematics - Bio 615

Consensus methods. Strict consensus methods

Phylogeny and Systematics

CHAPTER 26 PHYLOGENY AND THE TREE OF LIFE Connecting Classification to Phylogeny

"Nothing in biology makes sense except in the light of evolution Theodosius Dobzhansky

The practice of naming and classifying organisms is called taxonomy.

Phylogeny and systematics. Why are these disciplines important in evolutionary biology and how are they related to each other?

Systematics Lecture 3 Characters: Homology, Morphology

Chapter 16: Reconstructing and Using Phylogenies

Integrating Fossils into Phylogenies. Throughout the 20th century, the relationship between paleontology and evolutionary biology has been strained.

BINF6201/8201. Molecular phylogenetic methods

Phylogenetic Trees. What They Are Why We Do It & How To Do It. Presented by Amy Harris Dr Brad Morantz

Name: Class: Date: ID: A

AP Biology. Cladistics

AP Biology Notes Outline Enduring Understanding 1.B. Big Idea 1: The process of evolution drives the diversity and unity of life.

Biology 1B Evolution Lecture 2 (February 26, 2010) Natural Selection, Phylogenies

Thursday, January 14. Teaching Point: SWBAT. assess their knowledge to prepare for the Evolution Summative Assessment. (TOMORROW) Agenda:

Lab 06 Phylogenetics, part 1

"PRINCIPLES OF PHYLOGENETICS: ECOLOGY AND EVOLUTION" Integrative Biology 200B Spring 2009 University of California, Berkeley

PHYLOGENY AND SYSTEMATICS

How Biological Diversity Evolves

Biology 2. Lecture Material. For. Macroevolution. Systematics

Evolutionary Tree Analysis. Overview

Phylogenetic Trees. Phylogenetic Trees Five. Phylogeny: Inference Tool. Phylogeny Terminology. Picture of Last Quagga. Importance of Phylogeny 5.

Phylogenetic analysis. Characters

Chapter 17. Organizing Life's Diversity

The Life System and Environmental & Evolutionary Biology II

Biodiversity. The Road to the Six Kingdoms of Life

Phylogeny and the Tree of Life

Algorithms in Bioinformatics

Investigation 3: Comparing DNA Sequences to Understand Evolutionary Relationships with BLAST

SCIENTIFIC EVIDENCE TO SUPPORT THE THEORY OF EVOLUTION. Using Anatomy, Embryology, Biochemistry, and Paleontology

CHAPTERS 24-25: Evidence for Evolution and Phylogeny

Need for systematics. Applications of systematics. Linnaeus plus Darwin. Approaches in systematics. Principles of cladistics

Phylogeny is the evolutionary history of a group of organisms. Based on the idea that organisms are related by evolution

Chapter 26. Phylogeny and the Tree of Life. Lecture Presentations by Nicole Tunbridge and Kathleen Fitzpatrick Pearson Education, Inc.

Consensus Methods. * You are only responsible for the first two

How related are organisms?

Outline. Classification of Living Things

Fig. 26.7a. Biodiversity. 1. Course Outline Outcomes Instructors Text Grading. 2. Course Syllabus. Fig. 26.7b Table

Transcription:

Introduction to characters and parsimony analysis

Genetic Relationships Genetic relationships exist between individuals within populations These include ancestordescendent relationships and more indirect relationships based on common ancestry Within sexually reducing populations there is a network of relationships Genetic relations within populations can be measured with a coefficient of genetic relatedness

Phylogenetic Relationships Phylogenetic relationships exist between lineages (e.g. species, genes) These include ancestordescendent relationships and more indirect relationships based on common ancestry Phylogenetic relationships between species or lineages are (expected to be) treelike Phylogenetic relationships are not measured with a simple coefficient

Phylogenetic Relationships Traditionally phylogeny reconstruction was dominated by the search for ancestors, and ancestordescendant relationships In modern phylogenetics there is an emphasis on indirect relationships Given that all lineages are related, closeness of phylogenetic relationships is a relative concept.

Phylogenetic relationships Two lineages are more closely related to each other than to some other lineage if they share a more recent common ancestor this is the cladistic concept of relationships Phylogenetic hypotheses are hypotheses of common ancestry Frog Toad Oak Hypothetical ancestral lineage (Frog,Toad)Oak

Phylogenetic Trees terminal branches LEAVES A B C D E F G H I J node 1 node 2 polytomy interior branches A CLADOGRAM ROOT

CLADOGRAMS AND PHYLOGRAMS A B C D E H I J F G A B C D E H I J F G RELATIVE TIME ABSOLUTE TIME or DIVERGENCE

Trees Rooted and Unrooted A B C D E F G H I J A B C D E H I J F G ROOT ROOT A ROOT D E F B H J G C I

Characters and Character States Organisms comprise sets of features When organisms/taxa differ with respect to a feature (e.g. its presence or absence or different nucleotide bases at specific sites in a sequence) the different conditions are called character states The collection of character states with respect to a feature constitute a character

Character evolution Heritable changes (in morphology, gene sequences, etc.) produce different character states Similarities and differences in character states provide the basis for inferring phylogeny (i.e. provide evidence of relationships) The utility of this evidence depends on how often the evolutionary changes that produce the different character states occur independently

Unique and unreversed characters Given a heritable evolutionary change that is unique and unreversed (e.g. the origin of hair) in an ancestral species, the presence of the novel character state in any taxa must be due to inheritance from the ancestor Similarly, absence in any taxa must be because the taxa are not descendants of that ancestor The novelty is a homology acting as badge or marker for the descendants of the ancestor The taxa with the novelty are a clade (e.g. Mammalia)

Unique and unreversed characters Because hair evolved only once and is unreversed (not subsequently lost) it is homologous and provides unambiguous evidence for of relationships Lizard Human HAIR Frog change or step Dog absent present

Homoplasy Independent evolution Homoplasy is similarity that is not homologous (not due to common ancestry) It is the result of independent evolution (convergence, parallelism, reversal) Homoplasy can provide misleading evidence of phylogenetic relationships (if mistakenly interpreted as homology)

Homoplasy independent evolution Loss of tails evolved independently in humans and frogs there are two steps on the true tree Lizard Frog Human Dog TAIL (adult) absent present

Homoplasy misleading evidence of phylogeny If misinterpreted as homology, the absence of tails would be evidence for a wrong tree: grouping humans with frogs and lizards with dogs Human Frog Lizard Dog TAIL absent present

Homoplasy reversal Reversals are evolutionary changes back to an ancestral condition As with any homoplasy, reversals can provide misleading evidence of relationships True tree 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Wrong tree 1 2 7 8 3 4 5 6 9 10

Homoplasy a fundamental problem of phylogenetic inference If there were no homoplastic similarities inferring phylogeny would be easy all the pieces of the jigsaw would fit together neatly Distinguishing the misleading evidence of homoplasy from the reliable evidence of homology is a fundamental problem of phylogenetic inference

Homoplasy and Incongruence If we assume that there is a single correct phylogenetic tree then: When characters support conflicting phylogenetic trees we know that there must be some misleading evidence of relationships among the incongruent or incompatible characters Incongruence between two characters implies that at least one of the characters is homoplastic and that at least one of the trees the character supports is wrong

Incongruence or Incompatibility Lizard Frog Human Dog HAIR absent present These trees and characters are incongruent both trees cannot be correct, at least one is wrong and at least one character must be homoplastic Human Frog Lizard Dog TAIL absent present

Distinguishing homology and homoplasy Morphologists use a variety of techniques to distinguish homoplasy and homology Homologous features are expected to display detailed similarity (in position, structure, development) whereas homoplastic similarities are more likely to be superficial As recognised by Charles Darwin congruence with other characters provides the most compelling evidence for homology

The importance of congruence The importance, for classification, of trifling characters, mainly depends on their being correlated with several other characters of more or less importance. The value indeed of an aggregate of characters is very evident... a classification founded on any single character, however important that may be, has always failed. Charles Darwin: Origin of Species, Ch. 13

Congruence We prefer the true tree because it is supported by multiple congruent characters Lizard Frog Human Dog MAMMALIA Hair Single bone in lower jaw Lactation etc.

Homoplasy in molecular data Incongruence and therefore homoplasy can be common in molecular sequence data There are a limited number of alternative character states ( e.g. Only A, G, C and T in DNA) Rates of evolution are sometimes high Character states are chemically identical homology and homoplasy are equally similar cannot be distinguished by detailed study of similarity and differences

Parsimony analysis Parsimony methods provide one way of choosing among alternative phylogenetic hypotheses The parsimony criterion favours hypotheses that maximise congruence and minimise homoplasy It depends on the idea of the fit of a character to a tree

Character Fit Initially, we can define the fit of a character to a tree as the minimum number of steps required to explain the observed distribution of character states among taxa This is determined by parsimonious character optimization Characters differ in their fit to different trees

Character Fit Frog Cocodile Bird Kangeroo Bat Human Frog Kangeroo Cocodile Human Bat Bird Tree A 1 step Hair absent present Tree B 2 steps

Parsimony Analysis Given a set of characters, such as aligned sequences, parsimony analysis works by determining the fit (number of steps) of each character on a given tree The sum over all characters is called Tree Length Most parsimonious trees (MPTs) have the minimum tree length needed to explain the observed distributions of all the characters

Parsimony in practice Frog Bird amnion + hair CHARACTERS 1 2 3 4 5 6 lactation placenta antorbital fenestra + wings + Frog Tree 1 Bird 6 Cocodile 5 Kangeroo Bat 3 2 6 4 Human T A X A Crocodile Kangeroo Bat Human + + + + + + + + + + + + + + TREE LENGTH Frog Cocodile 5 Kangeroo 1 Bat 4 Bird 5 2 3 6 Human 4 FIT Tree 1 Tree 2 1 1 1 1 1 1 2 7 2 2 2 2 1 10 Tree 2 Of these two trees, Tree 1 has the shortest length and is the most parsimonious Both trees require some homoplasy (extra steps) 1 2 3

Results of parsimony analysis One or more most parsimonious trees Hypotheses of character evolution associated with each tree (where and how changes have occurred) Branch lengths (amounts of change associated with branches) Various tree and character statistics describing the fit between tree and data Suboptimal trees optional