Network (Reticulate) Evolution: Biology, Models, and Algorithms - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Network (Reticulate) Evolution: Biology, Models, and Algorithms

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Title: Network (Reticulate) Evolution: Biology, Models, and Algorithms


1
Network (Reticulate) Evolution Biology, Models,
and Algorithms
  • C. Randal Linder, Bernard M.E. Moret
  • University of Texas at Austin
  • (currently the Program for Evolutionary Dynamics,
    Harvard University)
  • University of New Mexico

2
Purpose of Tutorial
  • Familiarize you with the nature of reticulation
    in biology, especially hybrid speciation
  • Discuss the implications of reticulation for our
    understanding of evolution
  • Present currently available methods for
    simulating, detecting and reconstructing
    reticulation
  • Consider deficiencies of the current methods

3
Overview of Reticulation in Biology
  • What happens at the genetic level?
  • How does it relate to population genetic
    processes?
  • In particular, what processes can give the
    appearance of species level reticulation
  • How can we detect it?
  • How can we reconstruct it?
  • What biological tools need to be in place to
    generate the requisite data?

4
Idealized Nature
  • Wouldnt it be nice if
  • Sexual creatures would just behave themselves
  • Asexual lineages would keep their pseudopods to
    themselves

5
Then we could stick with bifurcating graphs
(trees) to properly describe the evolutionary
history of organismal lineages
6
Unruly Nature
  • Whatever is not forbidden will occur.
  • -- Gerald Myers
  • (ca 1980)

7
In Other Words
  • Nature does not care about our nice systems
  • Rather, the only rule is
  • If a set of genes can be brought together in a
    cell, survival and reproduction will be
    determined by the phenotype produced in the
    environment of the organism.
  • If the organism can survive and reproduce as well
    as or better than its competitors, it works no
    matter the mating/process that produced it

8
Therefore
  • Some species are able to interbreed or exchange
    genes in ways that violate normal notions about
    species and speciation
  • Reticulation is violation of the independence of
    each evolutionary lineage
  • Instead of bifurcation, lineages can mix and
    produce new lineages

9
  • This leads to the production of networks instead
    of trees

10
  • Molecular phylogeneticists will have failed to
    find the true tree, not because their methods
    are inadequate or because they have chosen the
    wrong genes, but because the history of life
    cannot properly be represented as a tree.
  • --Ford Doolittle

11
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12
Before Reticulation
  • Paradoxically, Ill begin with non-reticulate
    evolution
  • Bifurcating evolution (and sometimes hard
    polytomies)
  • Evolutionary lineages split and evolve
    independently from one another

13
Before Reticulation
  • Key Evolutionary Insight Because all evolution
    is a product of change from one generation to the
    next, the information must initially change in
    some form of bifurcating process.

agct
14
With Reticulation
  • The end result is admixture of different
    evolutionary histories

agct
15
Levels of Reticulation
  • Life is organized hierarchically and so
    reticulation can occur at different levels
  • Chromosomal (meiotic recombination)
  • Population (sexual recombination)
  • Species (interspecific hybridization and
    horizontal gene transfer)

16
Levels of Reticulation
  • Chromosomal (meiotic recombination)

17
Levels of Reticulation
  • Population (sexual recombination of haploid
    genomes)

18
Levels of Reticulation
  • Species (hybridization and gene transfer)

19
Levels Nested within Levels
20
Areas of Biological Research
  • Most of the work on reticulation has been done at
    the population genetic level
  • A great deal of work on recombination, especially
    meiotic recombination
  • Hybrid speciation and lateral gene transfer are
    less well studied
  • Intersect with the population genetic perspective
  • Will talk about this a bit later and from other
    speakers

21
Types of Hybrid Speciation
  • Allopolyploidization each parent of the hybrid
    contributes its entire nuclear genome (usually
    uniparental inheritance of the organelles)
  • Parents neednt have the same number of
    chromosomes

22
Types of Hybrid Speciation
  • Diploid (Homoploid) Hybridization each parent
    contributes half of its diploid chromosome set,
    as it would with normal sex.
  • Parents almost always have the same number of
    chromosomes

23
Types of Hybrid Speciation
  • Autopolyploidization a doubling of the diploid
    chromosome number in a single species
  • From a biological and topological perspective,
    could be considered a type of bifurcating
    speciation

24
Horizontal Gene Transfer
  • Hybridization between lineages, but an
    independent lineage is not produced
  • Hybrids backcross to one or both parents allowing
    introgression of genes between species
  • Genes are moved between lineages by a third party
    (vector), e.g., a virus

25
Horizontal Gene TransferIntrogressive
Hybridization
26
Horizontal Gene TransferGenome Capture
  • A complete organellar genome is transferred by
    hybridization

27
Horizontal Gene TransferBacterial Sex
  • Genetic material is moved by conjugation between
    compatible bacteria

28
Bacteria Promiscuous DNA Sharers
  • Lawrence, Ochman estimated that 755 of 4,288 ORFs
    in E. coli were from at least 234 lateral gene
    transfer events (Proc. Natl Acad. Sci. USA 95,
    9413-9417 (1998) )
  • General evidence

29
Horizontal Gene TransferExchange by a Vector
  • Genetic material is moved by a third party such
    as a virus or a combination of organisms, e.g.,
    mosquito and protozoan.

30
Neworks Have Incongruent Trees Within Them
31
Reticulation Events Have Incongruent Trees Within
Them
32
Reticulation Events Have Incongruent Trees Within
Them
33
Fundamental Insight
  • At the lowest possible level (individual DNA
    nucleotides on a single DNA strand) all evolution
    is ultimately tree-like.

34
How Might We Detect Reticulation?
  • Fundamentally, reticulation is a mixing of
    different evolutionary signals. Therefore
  • The signal from a genome that has experienced
    reticulation will be an average of its parents
    (Median approach)
  • Unrecombined stretches of DNA will have a signal
    that comes from one parent. (Incongruence
    approach)
  • Will see both approaches in methods for detection
    and reconstruction

35
Evolutionary Events that Mimic Species-Level
Reticulation
  • Lineage Sorting (gene tree/species tree problem)
  • Reticulation at lower levels, e.g., meiotic
    recombination

36
Evolutionary Events that Mimic Species-Level
Reticulation
  • Lineage Sorting (gene tree/species tree problem)
  • When reconstructing a species-level phylogeny
    using DNA sequence information we are actually
    reconstructing a gene tree.
  • Ancient alleles (alleles arising prior to some
    monophyletic group) may not be inherited by all
    species.
  • In essence, it is either a sampling problem or an
    irretrievable information loss problem.

37
Gene Tree/Species Tree
38
Gene Tree/Species Tree
  • All of the versions of a gene from a single
    common history (everything that is the same
    color) are referred to as orthologues.
  • Versions of a gene from a duplication event or
    the production of a new allele are paralogues

39
Gene Tree/Species Tree
40
Gene Tree/Species Tree
41
Gene Tree/Species Tree
42
Gene Tree/Species Tree
43
Gene Tree/Species Tree
44
Gene Tree/Species Tree
45
Gene Tree/Species Tree
  • Under a molecular clock, it is possible to
    detect the difference between incongruence due to
    hybridization and to a gene tree/species tree
    sampling problem.
  • GT/ST incongruences will occur at different
    depths.

46
Evolutionary Events that Mimic Species-Level
Reticulation
  • Reticulation at lower levels, e.g., meiotic
    recombination
  • Recombination can lead to loss of an allele for a
    lineage in a particular region of DNA essentially
    giving rise to a lineage sorting problem.

47
Recombination Example
48
Second Key Insight
  • Events that masquerade as species-level
    reticulate evolution are always the product of
    either true data loss or inadequate sampling.
  • Here, we encounter the importance of a population
    genetic perspective in phylogenetics.

49
Given the problem of misleading signals, how can
we distinguish true species-level reticulation
from reticulation at other levels, simple data
loss, and inadequate sampling?
50
Possible Solution
  • Increase the number of individuals sampled from a
    species/population and the number of markers.
  • Therefore, must take a multiple marker approach
    to recovering the species-level relationships
  • Data loss and lower level reticulation events
    should almost always act randomly with respect to
    which phylogeny is favored
  • Species-level reticulation will be biased toward
    a particular interpretation

51
Practical Concerns
  • Practical problems (for biologists)
  • Cost
  • Time
  • Lack of prior knowledge that all of the
    orthologues are there to be found

52
Caveats
  • Reticulation events that quickly follow
    speciation may not be detectable
  • Ancient reticulation events may not be
    recoverable
  • The computational requirements to detect and
    reconstruct reticulation may be considerable
  • We may have to rethink our ideas of species
    (levels/units of speciation)

53
Assembling the Network of Life ANOL
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