Wednesday 17 February 2016

Rooting the family tree of placental mammals

 February 15, 2016

Placental mammals consist of three main groups that diverged rapidly, evolving in wildly different directions: Afrotheria (for example, elephants and tenrecs), Xenarthra (such as armadillos and sloths) and Boreoeutheria (all other placental mammals). The relationships between them have been a subject of fierce controversy with multiple studies coming to incompatible conclusions over the last decade leading some researchers to suggest that these relationships might be impossible to resolve.

There are thus many outstanding questions such as which is the oldest sibling of the three? Did the mammals go their separate ways due to South America and Africa breaking apart? And if not, when did placentals split up?

"This has been one of the areas of greatest debate in evolutionary biology, with many researchers considering it impossible to resolve," said lead author Dr Tarver of Bristol's School of Earth Sciences. "Now we've proven these problems can be solved - you just need to analyse genome-scale datasets using models that accurately reflect genomic evolution."

The researchers assembled the largest mammalian phylogenomic dataset ever collected before testing it with a variety of models of molecular evolution, choosing the most robust model and then analysing the data using several supercomputer clusters at the University of Bristol and the University of Texas Advanced Computing Centre. "We tested it to destruction," said Dr Tarver. "We threw the kitchen sink at it."

"A complication in reconstructing evolutionary histories from genomic data is that different parts of genomes can and often do give conflicting accounts of the history," said Dr Siavash Mirarab at the University of California San Diego, USA. "Individual genes within the same species can have different histories. This is one reason why the controversy has stood so long - many thought the relationships couldn't be resolved."

To address the complexities of analysing large numbers of genes shared among many species, the researchers paired two fundamentally different approaches - concatenated and coalescent-based analyses - to confirm the findings. When the dust settled, the team had a specific family tree showing that Atlantogenata (containing the sibling groups of African Afrotheria and the South American Xenarthra) is the sister group to all other placentals.

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