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How to Build A Tree Edie Espejo 4 March 2016, ENT198

Partitioning Presentation

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Page 1: Partitioning Presentation

How to Build A TreeEdie Espejo

4 March 2016, ENT198

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How to Build A TreeEdie Espejo

@ The Moore Lab

Better

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Presentation Overview• Keywords

• A Closer Look at Nodes

• Motivation

• Central Question

• Methods

• Expectations

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Keywords to Begin With

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Phylogenetics Chronogram Speciation Event

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The study of the evolutionary relationships of organisms (while a phylogeny is an estimate of evolutionary relationships)

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Phylogenetics

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A time tree; the branch lengths of these trees are proportional to time

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Chronogram

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When one species becomes two; nodes represent speciation events in phylogenies

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Speciation Event

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When one species becomes two; nodes represent speciation events in phylogenies

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Speciation Event

A will represent a node in the following slides.

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Nodes Closer to PresentThis implies that speciation happens at a constant exponential rate

D. simulans

D. sechellia

D. melanogaster

D. yakuba

D. ananassae

Obscura group

Present

Origin of Group Present Day

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Nodes Closer to PresentThis implies that speciation happens at a constant exponential rate

ln(N

umbe

r of S

peci

es)

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Nodes Closer to RootThis implies an early burst of speciation

D. persimilis

D. pseudoobscuraD. ananassae

Melanogaster Subgroup

Root

Origin of Group Present Day

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Nodes Closer to RootThis implies an early burst of speciation

ln(N

umbe

r of S

peci

es)

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If the nodes are closer to the root in time trees, then there must have been an early burst of speciation.

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If the nodes are closer to the root in time trees, then there must have been an early burst of speciation.

False

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" . . . the use of very poor partitioning schemes can occasionally lead to strongly supported but

incorrect inferences from phylogenetic analyses."

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The Effects of Partitioning on Phylogenetic Inference

David Kainer, Robert Lanfear, from "Conclusion":

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In other words:

Partitioning phylogenies incorrectly can lead to biased trees

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The Effects of Partitioning on Phylogenetic Inference

David Kainer, Robert Lanfear, from "Conclusion":

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PartitioningPartitioning is the process of directing different portions of an alignment to different substitution

models

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PartitioningPartitioning is the process of directing different portions of an alignment to different substitution

models

A substitution model is a mathematical description the process of evolution of DNA

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An Alignment of Sequence Data

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Partitioning It One Way

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Gene 1 Gene 2

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The Same Alignment

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Partitioning It Another Way

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Partition 1 Partition 2 Partition 3

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Partition 1 Partition 2 Partition 3

So which partitioning scheme will yield the better tree?

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An important result:

Overly simplistic substitution models lead to trees that imply an early burst of speciation

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Underparameterized Model of Sequence Evolution Leads to Bias in the Estimation of Diversification Rates from Molecular Phylogenies

Liam Revell, Luke Harmon, Richard Glor

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What is the effect of partitioning schemes on divergence time estimates?

Question

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By Gene BIC AIC Everything ApartAll together

Partitioning Schemes

LEAST VARIATION

Partitioning schemes account for the evolutionary process across a sequence

data alignment

MOST VARIATION

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By Gene BIC AIC Everything ApartAll together

Partitioning Schemes

Bayesian Information

Criterion

Akaike Information

Criterion

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Get sequence data Align the sequence data

By Gene BIC AIC

Create chronograms

Everything ApartAll together

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Create chronograms

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Use Marginal Likelihood to rank the fit of partitioning schemes to the sequence data from best to worst

Draw Conclusions

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Based on previous studies:Suboptimal partitioning will lead to

biased time trees

Expectations

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Based on previous studies:If we partition too little, we will infer trees that support an early burst of speciation

Expectations

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The notion of an early burst of speciation may not be properly supported.

Expectations

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The Moore Lab and RSPIB

Acknowledgements

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