Conflict among individual mitochondrial proteins in resolving the phylogeny of eutherian orders

被引:161
作者
Cao, Y
Janke, A
Waddell, PJ
Westerman, M
Takenaka, O
Murata, S
Okada, N
Pääbo, S
Hasegawa, M
机构
[1] Inst Stat Math, Minato Ku, Tokyo 1068569, Japan
[2] Tokyo Inst Technol, Fac Biosci & Biotechnol, Midori Ku, Yokohama, Kanagawa 2268501, Japan
[3] Univ Munich, Dept Zool, D-8000 Munich 2, Germany
[4] La Trobe Univ, Sch Genet & Human Variat, Bundoora, Vic 3083, Australia
[5] Kyoto Univ, Primate Res Inst, Inuyama, Aichi 484, Japan
关键词
mammalian phylogeny; mitochondrial proteins; trees of individual proteins; maximum-likelihood method; ND1; convergent evolution;
D O I
10.1007/PL00006389
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
The phylogenetic relationship among primates, ferungulates (artiodactyls + cetaceans + perissodactyls + carnivores), and rodents was examined using proteins encoded by the Il strand of mtDNA, with marsupials and monotremes as the outgroup, Trees estimated from individual proteins were compared in detail with the tree estimated from all 12 proteins (either concatenated or summing up log-likelihood scores for each gene). Although the overall evidence strongly suggests ((primates, ferungulates), rodents), the ND1 data clearly support another tree, ((primates, rodents), ferungulates). To clarify whether this contradiction is due to (1) a stochastic (sampling) error; (2) minor model-based errors (e.g., ignoring site rate variability), or (3) convergent and parallel evolution (specifically between either primates and rodents or ferungulates and the outgroup), the ND1 genes from many additional species of primates, rodents, other eutherian orders, and the outgroup (marsupials + monotremes) were sequenced. The phylogenetic analyses were extensive and aimed to eliminate the following artifacts as possible causes of the aberrant result: base composition biases, unequal site substitution rates, or the cumulative effects of both. Neither more sophisticated evolutionary analyses nor the addition of species changed the previous conclusion. That is, the statistical support for grouping rodents and primates to the exclusion of all other taxa fluctuates upward or downward in quite a tight range centered near 95% confidence. These results and a site-by-site examination of the sequences clearly suggest that convergent or parallel evolution has occurred in ND1 between primates and rodents and/or between ferungulates and the outgroup. While the primate/rodent grouping is strange, ND1 also throws some interesting light on the relationships of some eutherian orders, marsupials, and montremes. In these parts of the tree, ND1 shows no apparent tendency for unexplained convergences.
引用
收藏
页码:307 / 322
页数:16
相关论文
共 72 条
[41]   Evolution of chlorophyll and bacteriochlorophyll: The problem of invariant sites in sequence analysis [J].
Lockhart, PJ ;
Larkum, AWD ;
Steel, MA ;
Waddell, PJ ;
Penny, D .
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 1996, 93 (05) :1930-1934
[42]  
LOCKHART PJ, 1994, MOL BIOL EVOL, V11, P605
[43]   Complete nucleotide sequences of the domestic cat (Felis catus) mitochondrial genome and a transposed mtDNA tandem repeat (Numt) in the nuclear genome [J].
Lopez, JV ;
Cevario, S ;
OBrien, SJ .
GENOMICS, 1996, 33 (02) :229-246
[44]   MATERNALLY TRANSMITTED HISTOCOMPATIBILITY ANTIGEN OF MICE - A HYDROPHOBIC PEPTIDE OF A MITOCHONDRIALLY ENCODED PROTEIN [J].
LOVELAND, B ;
WANG, CR ;
YONEKAWA, H ;
HERMEL, E ;
LINDAHL, KF .
CELL, 1990, 60 (06) :971-980
[45]  
Luckett W. Patrick, 1994, Journal of Mammalian Evolution, V2, P255, DOI 10.1007/BF01464277
[46]  
Maddison WP, 1992, MACCLADE VERSION 3 0
[47]   Structural biology and phylogenetic estimation [J].
Naylor, GJP ;
Brown, WM .
NATURE, 1997, 388 (6642) :527-528
[48]   MAMMALIAN PHYLOGENY - SHAKING THE TREE [J].
NOVACEK, MJ .
NATURE, 1992, 356 (6365) :121-125
[49]   Molecular systematics - The platypus put in its place [J].
Penny, D ;
Hasegawa, M .
NATURE, 1997, 387 (6633) :549-550
[50]  
Philippe Herve, 1994, Journal of Mammalian Evolution, V2, P133, DOI 10.1007/BF01464365