Uncovering Hidden Phylogenetic Consensus in Large Data Sets

被引:28
作者
Pattengale, Nicholas D. [1 ]
Aberer, Andre J. [2 ]
Swenson, Krister M. [3 ,4 ]
Stamatakis, Alexandros [2 ]
Moret, Bernard M. E. [5 ]
机构
[1] Sandia Natl Labs, Albuquerque, NM 87185 USA
[2] Heidelberg Inst Theoret Studies, Sci Comp Grp, D-69118 Heidelberg, Germany
[3] Univ Ottawa, Lab Innovat Bioinformat, Ottawa, ON K1N 6N5, Canada
[4] Univ Quebec, Lab Combinatoire & Informat Math, Montreal, PQ H2P 2K7, Canada
[5] EPFL IC IIF LCBB, EPFL, Swiss Fed Inst Technol, Lab Computat Biol & Bioinformat, CH-1015 Lausanne, Switzerland
关键词
Phylogeny; consensus methods; bootstrapping; support values; MAST; TREES; INFORMATION; AGREEMENT;
D O I
10.1109/TCBB.2011.28
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学];
学科分类号
070307 [化学生物学];
摘要
Many of the steps in phylogenetic reconstruction can be confounded by "rogue" taxa-taxa that cannot be placed with assurance anywhere within the tree, indeed, whose location within the tree varies with almost any choice of algorithm or parameters. Phylogenetic consensus methods, in particular, are known to suffer from this problem. In this paper, we provide a novel framework to define and identify rogue taxa. In this framework, we formulate a bicriterion optimization problem, the relative information criterion, that models the net increase in useful information present in the consensus tree when certain taxa are removed from the input data. We also provide an effective greedy heuristic to identify a subset of rogue taxa and use this heuristic in a series of experiments, with both pathological examples from the literature and a collection of large biological data sets. As the presence of rogue taxa in a set of bootstrap replicates can lead to deceivingly poor support values, we propose a procedure to recompute support values in light of the rogue taxa identified by our algorithm; applying this procedure to our biological data sets caused a large number of edges to move from "unsupported" to "supported" status, indicating that many existing phylogenies should be recomputed and reevaluated to reduce any inaccuracies introduced by rogue taxa. We also discuss the implementation issues encountered while integrating our algorithm into RAxML v7.2.7, particularly those dealing with scaling up the analyses. This integration enables practitioners to benefit from our algorithm in the analysis of very large data sets (up to 2,500 taxa and 10,000 trees, although we present the results of even larger analyses).
引用
收藏
页码:902 / 911
页数:10
相关论文
共 22 条
[1]
Amir A., 1994, SIAM Journal on Computing, V26, P758
[2]
[Anonymous], 2004, Inferring phylogenies
[3]
Split Decomposition: A New and Useful Approach to Phylogenetic Analysis of Distance Data [J].
Bandelt, Hans-Juergen ;
Dress, Andreas W. M. .
MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 1992, 1 (03) :242-252
[4]
Neighbor-Net: An agglomerative method for the construction of phylogenetic networks [J].
Bryant, D ;
Moulton, V .
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2004, 21 (02) :255-265
[5]
Bryant D, 2002, BIOCONSENSUS DIMACS, V61, P163
[6]
Bryant David, 1997, PhD thesis
[7]
Summarizing a posterior distribution of trees using agreement subtrees [J].
Cranston, Karen A. ;
Rannala, Bruce .
SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY, 2007, 56 (04) :578-590
[8]
ON THE AGREEMENT OF MANY TREES [J].
FARACH, M ;
PRZYTYCKA, TM ;
THORUP, M .
INFORMATION PROCESSING LETTERS, 1995, 55 (06) :297-301
[9]
Molecular phylogeny of the Arctoidea (Carnivora): Effect of missing data on supertree and supermatrix analyses of multiple gene data sets [J].
Fulton, Tara L. ;
Strobeck, Curtis .
MOLECULAR PHYLOGENETICS AND EVOLUTION, 2006, 41 (01) :165-181
[10]
Seeing the trees for the network: Consensus, information content, and superphylogenies [J].
Gauthier, Olivier ;
Lapointe, Francois-Joseph .
SYSTEMATIC BIOLOGY, 2007, 56 (02) :345-355