2019
DOI: 10.1101/639153
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The soursop genome and comparative genomics of basal angiosperms provide new insights on evolutionary incongruence

Abstract: Deep relationships and the sequence of divergence among major lineages of angiosperms (magnoliids, monocots and eudicots) remain ambiguous and differ depending on analytical approaches and datasets used.Complete genomes potentially provide opportunities to resolve these uncertainties, but two recently published magnoliid genomes instead deliver further conflicting signals. To disentangle key angiosperm relationships, we report a high-quality draft genome for the soursop (Annona muricata, Annonaceae). We recons… Show more

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Cited by 4 publications
(19 citation statements)
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References 63 publications
(73 reference statements)
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“…Specifically, magnoliids are resolved as sister to eudicots, with relatively strong support 11 , which is consistent with the results of a phylotranscriptomic analysis of 92 streptophytes 13 and 20 representative angiosperms 14 . Alternatively, magnoliids are resolved as sister to eudicots and monocots, with weak support [8][9][10]12 , which is in agreement with the large-scale plastome phylogenomic analysis of land plants, Viridiplantae, and angiosperms [15][16][17] . As phylogenetic inferences rely heavily on the sampling of lineages and genes, as well as analytical methods 5 , these controversial taxonomic placements of magnoliids relative to monocots and eudicots need to be further examined with more genomic data from magnoliids.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 77%
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“…Specifically, magnoliids are resolved as sister to eudicots, with relatively strong support 11 , which is consistent with the results of a phylotranscriptomic analysis of 92 streptophytes 13 and 20 representative angiosperms 14 . Alternatively, magnoliids are resolved as sister to eudicots and monocots, with weak support [8][9][10]12 , which is in agreement with the large-scale plastome phylogenomic analysis of land plants, Viridiplantae, and angiosperms [15][16][17] . As phylogenetic inferences rely heavily on the sampling of lineages and genes, as well as analytical methods 5 , these controversial taxonomic placements of magnoliids relative to monocots and eudicots need to be further examined with more genomic data from magnoliids.…”
Section: Introductionsupporting
confidence: 77%
“…This WGD event might have occurred shortly before the split of the Magnoliales and Laurales, as was indicated in a recent study on the genome evolution of Litsea 89 . However, this hypothesis needs to be further examined in light of other results, such as the absence of a WGD event in Magnoliales Annona muricata 10 .…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…However, some deep nodes, such as the phylogenetic divergence order of Nymphaeales and Amborellales, the relationship among the five mesangiosperm lineages, were not well resolved in the current analysis. Extended samplings of more representatives of the early angiosperms and the comparison of mt phylogeny with those of the plastid [36,37], nuclear [34,72], morphology, and non-molecular data would be essential to confidently revolve the phylogenetic relationships of magnoliids relative to monocots and eudicots.…”
Section: Plos Onementioning
confidence: 99%
“…avocado, black pepper, cinnamon, soursop), only two genomes have been published to date (Chaw et al 2019;Chen et al 2019). Contrary to expectations, comparative genomic analyzes did not resolve the still unclear relationships of magnoliids with the rest of angiosperms (Strijk et al 2019b). Results strongly disagreed on the position of magnoliids, supporting either a sister relationship to eudicots and monocots (Chen et al 2019), or to eudicots alone (Chaw et al 2019).…”
Section: Early Angiosperm Genome Evolutionmentioning
confidence: 71%