Global Brassicaceae phylogeny based on filtering of 1,000-gene dataset

Kasper Hendriks(Naturalis Biodiversity Center), Christiane Kiefer(Heidelberg University), Ihsan A. Al‐Shehbaz(Missouri Botanical Garden), C. Donovan Bailey(New Mexico State University), Alexander Hooft van Huysduynen(Naturalis Biodiversity Center), Lachezar A. Nikolov, Lars Nauheimer(James Cook University), Alexandre R. Zuntini(Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), Dmitry A. German(Altai State University), Andreas Franzke(Heidelberg University), Мarcus A. Koch(Heidelberg University), Martin A. Lysák(Masaryk University), Óscar Toro‐Núñez(University of Concepción), Barış Özüdoğru(Hacettepe University), Vanessa R. Invernón(Sorbonne Université), Nora Walden(Heidelberg University), Olivier Maurin(Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), Nikolai M. Hay(Duke University), Philip Shushkov(Indiana University Bloomington), Terezie Mandáková(Masaryk University), M. Eric Schranz(Wageningen University & Research), Mats Thulin(Uppsala University), Michael D. Windham(Duke University), Ivana Rešetnik(University of Zagreb), Stanislav Španiel(Slovak Academy of Sciences), Elfy Ly(Delft University of Technology), J. Chris Pires(Colorado State University), Alex Harkess(HudsonAlpha Institute for Biotechnology), Barbara Neuffer(Osnabrück University), Robert Vogt(Botanic Garden and Botanical Museum Berlin), Christian Bräuchler(Natural History Museum Vienna), Heimo Rainer(Natural History Museum Vienna), Steven B. Janssens(KU Leuven), Michaela Schmull(Harvard University), Alan Forrest(Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh), Alessia Guggisberg(ETH Zurich), Sue Zmarzty(Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), Brendan J. Lepschi(Australian National Herbarium), Neville Scarlett(La Trobe University), Fred W. Stauffer(University of Geneva), Ines Schönberger(Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research), Peter B. Heenan(Manaaki Whenua – Landcare Research), William J. Baker(Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), Félix Forest(Royal Botanic Gardens, Kew), Klaus Mummenhoff(Osnabrück University), Frederic Lens(Leiden University)
Current Biology
September 1, 2023
Cited by 125Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The mustard family (Brassicaceae) is a scientifically and economically important family, containing the model plant Arabidopsis thaliana and numerous crop species that feed billions worldwide. Despite its relevance, most phylogenetic trees of the family are incompletely sampled and often contain poorly supported branches. Here, we present the most complete Brassicaceae genus-level family phylogenies to date (Brassicaceae Tree of Life or BrassiToL) based on nuclear (1,081 genes, 319 of the 349 genera; 57 of the 58 tribes) and plastome (60 genes, 265 genera; all tribes) data. We found cytonuclear discordance between the two, which is likely a result of rampant hybridization among closely and more distantly related lineages. To evaluate the impact of such hybridization on the nuclear phylogeny reconstruction, we performed five different gene sampling routines, which increasingly removed putatively paralog genes. Our cleaned subset of 297 genes revealed high support for the tribes, whereas support for the main lineages (supertribes) was moderate. Calibration based on the 20 most clock-like nuclear genes suggests a late Eocene to late Oligocene origin of the family. Finally, our results strongly support a recently published new family classification, dividing the family into two subfamilies (one with five supertribes), together representing 58 tribes. This includes five recently described or re-established tribes, including Arabidopsideae, a monogeneric tribe accommodating Arabidopsis without any close relatives. With a worldwide community of thousands of researchers working on Brassicaceae and its diverse members, our new genus-level family phylogeny will be an indispensable tool for studies on biodiversity and plant biology.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis