BackgroundPolyploidy is important from a phylogenetic perspective because of its immense past impact on evolution and its potential future impact on diversification, survival and adaptation, especially in plants. Molecular population genetics studies of polyploid organisms have been difficult because of problems in sequencing multiple-copy nuclear genes using Sanger sequencing. This paper describes a method for sequencing a barcoded mixture of targeted gene regions using next-generation sequencing methods to overcome these problems.ResultsUsing 64 3-bp barcodes, we successfully sequenced three chloroplast and two nuclear gene regions (each of which contained two gene copies with up to two alleles per individual) in a total of 60 individuals across 11 species of Australian Poa grasses. This method had high replicability, a low sequencing error rate (after appropriate quality control) and a low rate of missing data. Eighty-eight percent of the 320 gene/individual combinations produced sequence reads, and >80% of individuals produced sufficient reads to detect all four possible nuclear alleles of the homeologous nuclear loci with 95% probability.We applied this method to a group of sympatric Australian alpine Poa species, which we discovered to share an allopolyploid ancestor with a group of American Poa species. All markers revealed extensive allele sharing among the Australian species and so we recommend that the current taxonomy be re-examined. We also detected hypermutation in the trnH-psbA marker, suggesting it should not be used as a land plant barcode region. Some markers indicated differentiation between Tasmanian and mainland samples. Significant positive spatial genetic structure was detected at <100 km with chloroplast but not nuclear markers, which may be a result of restricted seed flow and long-distance pollen flow in this wind-pollinated group.ConclusionsOur results demonstrate that 454 sequencing of barcoded amplicon mixtures can be used to reliably sample all alleles of homeologous loci in polyploid species and successfully investigate phylogenetic relationships among species, as well as to investigate phylogeographic hypotheses. This next-generation sequencing method is more affordable than and at least as reliable as bacterial cloning. It could be applied to any experiment involving sequencing of amplicon mixtures.
A next-generation sequencing method for overcoming the multiple gene copy problem in polyploid phylogenetics, applied to Poa grasses
Philippa C. Griffin,C. Robin,A. Hoffmann
Published 2011 in BMC Biology
ABSTRACT
PUBLICATION RECORD
- Publication year
2011
- Venue
BMC Biology
- Publication date
2011-03-23
- Fields of study
Biology, Medicine, Environmental Science
- Identifiers
- External record
- Source metadata
Semantic Scholar, PubMed
CITATION MAP
EXTRACTION MAP
CLAIMS
CONCEPTS
- 454 sequencing
A pyrosequencing platform used here to generate reads from pooled amplicon libraries.
Aliases: pyrosequencing, 454 platform
- allele detection probability
The probability that sequencing depth is sufficient to observe all alleles present at a locus in an individual.
Aliases: read sufficiency for allele detection
- allele sharing
The presence of the same genetic variants across different species or individuals in the studied Poa group.
Aliases: shared alleles
- allopolyploid ancestor
An ancestral polyploid lineage formed through hybridization between distinct parental lineages.
Aliases: shared allopolyploid origin
- australian alpine poa species
A sympatric group of Australian alpine grasses from the genus Poa analyzed for phylogenetic and taxonomic relationships.
Aliases: Australian Poa species, alpine Poa
- barcoded amplicon mixture sequencing
A next-generation sequencing workflow that pools PCR amplicons tagged with sample-specific barcodes for multiplexed reading.
Aliases: barcoded mixture sequencing, barcoded amplicon pooling
- homeologous nuclear loci
Nuclear gene loci in polyploids that represent corresponding copies derived from different parental genomes.
Aliases: homeologous loci, nuclear homeologs
- hypermutation
An unusually elevated mutation rate or variability observed in a marker region.
Aliases: high mutation rate
- land plant barcode region
A DNA region considered for standardized identification of land plant taxa.
Aliases: plant barcode
- polyploid grasses
Grass taxa in the study that contain multiple chromosome sets and may carry more than one gene copy per locus.
Aliases: polyploid organisms, polyploid Poa
- taxonomy re-examination
A proposed reassessment of species boundaries and classification within the sampled Poa taxa.
Aliases: taxonomic review
- trnh-psba marker
A chloroplast intergenic spacer region used as a candidate DNA barcode locus in land plants.
Aliases: trnH-psbA, chloroplast trnH-psbA
REFERENCES
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