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Genome-Scale Phylogeny and the Detection of...
Journal article

Genome-Scale Phylogeny and the Detection of Systematic Biases

Abstract

Phylogenetic inference from sequences can be misled by both sampling (stochastic) error and systematic error (nonhistorical signals where reality differs from our simplified models). A recent study of eight yeast species using 106 concatenated genes from complete genomes showed that even small internal edges of a tree received 100% bootstrap support. This effective negation of stochastic error from large data sets is important, but longer sequences exacerbate the potential for biases (systematic error) to be positively misleading. Indeed, when we analyzed the same data set using minimum evolution optimality criteria, an alternative tree received 100% bootstrap support. We identified a compositional bias as responsible for this inconsistency and showed that it is reduced effectively by coding the nucleotides as purines and pyrimidines (RY-coding), reinforcing the original tree. Thus, a comprehensive exploration of potential systematic biases is still required, even though genome-scale data sets greatly reduce sampling error.

Authors

Phillips MJ; Delsuc F; Penny D

Journal

Molecular Biology and Evolution, Vol. 21, No. 7, pp. 1455–1458

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Publication Date

July 1, 2004

DOI

10.1093/molbev/msh137

ISSN

0737-4038

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