Reconstructing the origin and evolution of land plants and their algal relatives is a fundamental problem in plant phylogenetics, and is essential for understanding how critical adaptations arose, including the embryo, vascular tissue, seeds, and flowers. Despite advances in molecular systematics, some hypotheses of relationships remain weakly resolved. Inferring deep phylogenies with bouts of rapid diversification can be problematic; however, genome-scale data should significantly increase the number of informative characters for analyses. Recent phylogenomic reconstructions focused on the major divergences of plants have resulted in promising but inconsistent results. One limitation is sparse taxon sampling, likely resulting from the difficulty and cost of data generation. To address this limitation, transcriptome data for 92 streptophyte taxa were generated and analyzed along with 11 published plant genome sequences. Phylogenetic reconstructions were conducted using up to 852 nuclear genes and 1,701,170 aligned sites. Sixty-nine analyses were performed to test the robustness of phylogenetic inferences to permutations of the data matrix or to phylogenetic method, including supermatrix, supertree, and coalescent-based approaches, maximumlikelihood and Bayesian methods, partitioned and unpartitioned analyses, and amino acid versus DNA alignments. Among other results, we find robust support for a sister-group relationship between land plants and one group of streptophyte green algae, the Zygnematophyceae. Strong and robust support for a clade comprising liverworts and mosses is inconsistent with a widely accepted view of early land plant evolution, and suggests that phylogenetic hypotheses used to understand the evolution of fundamental plant traits should be reevaluated.land plants | Streptophyta | phylogeny | phylogenomics | transcriptome T he origin of embryophytes (land plants) in the Ordovician period roughly 480 Mya (1-4) marks one of the most important events in the evolution of life on Earth. The early evolution of embryophytes in terrestrial environments was facilitated by numerous innovations, including parental protection for the developing embryo, sperm and egg production in multicellular protective structures, and an alternation of phases (often referred to as generations) in which a diploid sporophytic life history stage gives rise to a multicellular haploid gametophytic phase. With Significance Early branching events in the diversification of land plants and closely related algal lineages remain fundamental and unresolved questions in plant evolutionary biology. Accurate reconstructions of these relationships are critical for testing hypotheses of character evolution: for example, the origins of the embryo, vascular tissue, seeds, and flowers. We investigated relationships among streptophyte algae and land plants using the largest set of nuclear genes that has been applied to this problem to date. Hypothesized relationships were rigorously tested through a series of analyses to assess systematic er...
Coevolutionary interactions are thought to have spurred the evolution of key innovations and driven the diversification of much of life on Earth. However, the genetic and evolutionary basis of the innovations that facilitate such interactions remains poorly understood. We examined the coevolutionary interactions between plants (Brassicales) and butterflies (Pieridae), and uncovered evidence for an escalating evolutionary arms-race. Although gradual changes in trait complexity appear to have been facilitated by allelic turnover, key innovations are associated with gene and genome duplications. Furthermore, we show that the origins of both chemical defenses and of molecular counter adaptations were associated with shifts in diversification rates during the arms-race. These findings provide an important connection between the origins of biodiversity, coevolution, and the role of gene and genome duplications as a substrate for novel traits.ver half a century ago, Ehrlich and Raven (1) coined the term 'coevolution' and proposed that coevolutionary interactions between species with close ecological relationships generated much of the eukaryotic biodiversity on Earth. One of their primary examples of coevolution was the chemically mediated interactions between butterflies of the subfamily Pierinae (Pieridae, Lepidoptera) and their angiosperm host-plants in the order Brassicales. Members of the plant order Brassicales are united by their production of secondary metabolites called glucosinolates (i.e., mustard oils). Upon tissue damage, glucosinolates are modified into toxins long studied for their defensive properties and flavor (e.g., mustard and horseradish) (2). In the Arabidopsis thaliana (thale cress) genome, at least 52 genes are involved in glucosinolate biosynthesis (3, 4) and some exhibit strong evidence of adaptive evolution that is attributed to herbivore mediated selection (5, 6). Pierinae caterpillars detoxify the glucosinolates of their Brassicales host-plants by redirecting these otherwise toxic breakdown products to inert metabolites using a gene that encodes a nitrile-specifier protein (7). The key innovation of the Brassicales, defensive glucosinolates, evolved roughly 90 million years ago (Ma); within 10 million years, Pierinae responded with their own key innovation, the nitrilespecifier protein, and colonized the Brassicales. Subsequently, Pierinae net diversification rates increased compared with that of their sister clade Coliadinae, whose members did not colonize Brassicales (8).Although these studies provide "perhaps the most convincing example" that the evolution of a key innovation resulted in an increased net diversification rate (9), much remains unknown about the origins and subsequent evolutionary dynamics of the key innovations that have had macroevolutionary consequences. To address this gap in the literature, here we further investigate these key innovations in the aforementioned plant and butterfly lineages by (i) assessing if these innovations increased in complexity over time and are...
The 1,000 plants (1KP) project is an international multi-disciplinary consortium that has generated transcriptome data from over 1,000 plant species, with exemplars for all of the major lineages across the Viridiplantae (green plants) clade. Here, we describe how to access the data used in a phylogenomics analysis of the first 85 species, and how to visualize our gene and species trees. Users can develop computational pipelines to analyse these data, in conjunction with data of their own that they can upload. Computationally estimated protein-protein interactions and biochemical pathways can be visualized at another site. Finally, we comment on our future plans and how they fit within this scalable system for the dissemination, visualization, and analysis of large multi-species data sets.
Ferns are the closest sister group to all seed plants, yet little is known about their genomes other than that they are generally colossal. Here, we report on the genomes of Azolla filiculoides and Salvinia cucullata (Salviniales) and present evidence for episodic whole-genome duplication in ferns-one at the base of 'core leptosporangiates' and one specific to Azolla. One fern-specific gene that we identified, recently shown to confer high insect resistance, seems to have been derived from bacteria through horizontal gene transfer. Azolla coexists in a unique symbiosis with N-fixing cyanobacteria, and we demonstrate a clear pattern of cospeciation between the two partners. Furthermore, the Azolla genome lacks genes that are common to arbuscular mycorrhizal and root nodule symbioses, and we identify several putative transporter genes specific to Azolla-cyanobacterial symbiosis. These genomic resources will help in exploring the biotechnological potential of Azolla and address fundamental questions in the evolution of plant life.
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