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Application of Phylogenetic Networks in Evolutionary Studies

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Title: Application of Phylogenetic Networks in Evolutionary Studies


1
Application of Phylogenetic Networks in
Evolutionary Studies
  • Daniel H. Huson and David Bryant
  • Presented by Peggy Wang

2
The plan
  • Terminology
  • Split networks
  • What are they?
  • How can they be interpreted?
  • Phylogenetic inference
  • SplitsTree4

3
A tree of terms..
4
Terminology
  • phylogenetic network
  • any network in which taxa are represented by
    nodes and their evolutionary relationships are
    represented by edges

5
Types of networks
  • phylogenetic tree
  • Leaf labeled tree that represents the
    evolutionary history of a set of taxa, possibly
    with branch(edge) lengths, either unrooted or
    rooted.
  • reticulate network
  • Phylogenetic tree additional edges. Nodes with
    more than two parents represent reticulate events
    such as hybridization, recombination and hgt
  • split network
  • Represents incompatible and ambiguous signals in
    a data set. Parallel edges represents splits
    computed from data. Incompatible splits may
    result in nodes that do not represent ancestral
    species.

6
Wait whats a split again?
  • split
  • A partition of the taxa into two nonempty
    subsets, such as the partition obtained when we
    remove a branch from a phylogenetic tree.
  • split network (formally)
  • For a given taxon set X and set of splits S, we
    define a split network N to be a connected graph
    in which some of the nodes are labeled by taxa
    and all edges are labeled by splits.

7
  • Removing all edges associated with a given split
    s in S divides N into two connected components,
    one part containing all taxa on one side of S and
    the other part containing all taxa on the other
    side.
  • The edges along any shortest path in N are all
    associated with different splits.
  • A split network contains exactly the same
    information as a list of splits with a weight for
    each split.

8
  • Every split network represents a unique
    collection of splits.
  • A given collection of splits can have many
    different split network representations.
  • The interpretation of the network depends on how
    the splits were constructed and assigned weights

9
Interpreting Split Networks Representing
multiple trees
  • We can use split networks to summarize a large
    collection of trees.
  • Code each individual tree as a collection of
    splits
  • Define a summary set of splits
  • Represent the set using a split network.
  • Consensus networks
  • Constructed from all splits appearing in at least
    some fixed proportion of input trees

10
Interpreting Split NetworksRepresenting
multiple trees
  • Confidence sets
  • Assign an interval for the weights of each split
  • A tree is contained within the split network N if
  • Every split in the tree is a split in the network
  • For every split in the tree, the corresponding
    branch length is contained within the
    corresponding interval
  • For every split in the network not in the tree,
    the assigned interval contains zero.
  • .

N
11
Interpreting Split NetworksRepresenting
multiple trees
Geometric interpretation Index splits from 1 to
m. Tree can be coded as a point in m-dimensional
space the ith coordinate is the length of the
ith split, or 0 if that split is not present in
the tree.
12
Interpreting Splits NetworksNetworks and
systematic error
  • Sampling error
  • Random error resulting from a small sample size
    (number of sites).
  • Deal with these errors using nonparametric
    bootstrap, multiple samples from posterior
    distribution
  • Systematic error
  • Mistakes in the assumptions of a model or method
    which cause data to be misinterpreted. Likely to
    occur with large, multigene, heterogeneous data
    sets.
  • How to deal with these errors?

13
Interpreting Splits NetworksNetworks and
systematic error
  • Phylogenetic inference
  • Construct a split network using the best
    available model and method.
  • Determine if the network is significantly
    different from a tree.
  • If the tree is significantly non-treelike, then
    there is probably an error in the model. If
    possible, improve the model and try again.
  • If the network is treelike, and there is no
    significant sampling error, the continue with a
    tree-based phylogenetic analysis.

14
Reticulate Networks
2 disagreeing trees
Split network represents all splits present in
either of the two trees
Reticulate network Explains the differences in
the two trees using 3 reticulation events
15
SplitsTree4
  • Integrates a wide range of phylogenetic network
    and phylogenetic tree methods, inference tools,
    data management utilities, and validation
    methods.
  • Included methods for inferring split networks
  • From character data. Median networks, parsimony
    splits, spectral analysis
  • From distance matrices. Split decomposition and
    neighbor-net
  • From sets of trees. Consensus networks and
    supernetworks.
  • Also constructs other types of phylogenetic
    networks, eg recombination and hybridization
    networks
  • User friendly?!

16
Example 1Heterogeneous Evolution
Jukes-Cantor p0.75 q0.05 0ltrlt0.4
17
Example 2Animal Phylogeny
Coelomate hypothesis Ecdysozoa hypothesis
18
More examples..Dusky dolphins
60 variables (sites of DNA) 35 haplotypes
Neighbor-joining tree with bootstrap values
Consensus network of 3 MP trees
Split decomposition network
95 confidence network
Median network
Neighbor-net network
19
Conclusion!
  • Split networks are useful for visualization.
  • However they are not useful for making conclusive
    phylogenetic analysis.
  • SplitsTree4 encompasses many tools, but are they
    really that useful?
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