TY - JOUR
T1 - Molecular Systematics of Tribe Physarieae (Brassicaceae) Based on Nuclear ITS, LUMINIDEPENDENS, and Chloroplast ndhF
AU - Fuentes-Soriano, Sara
AU - Kellogg, Elizabeth A.
N1 - Funding Information:
The authors thank P. F. Stevens, J. C. Pires, Z. S. Rogers, I. A. Al-Shehbaz, and three anonymous reviewers for providing valuable suggestions and discussions that greatly helped to improve the manuscript. SFS is very thankful to the senior members of the Kellogg lab for providing valuable training and feedback regarding wet and dry lab analyses. Both authors are grateful to the curators of B, ENCB, F, GA, GH, MEXU, MO, NMC, OSUB, TEX, and US for loaning herbarium material. L. O. Alvarado-Cárdenas, H. Flores-Olvera, G. Gust, C. Hinostrosa, Z. S. Rogers, and R. Torres-Colín assisted SFS with field work. Funding was provided to SFS by the Consejo Nacional de Ciencia y Tecnología (Mexican government), the E. Desmond Lee and Family Endowment, the Missouri Botanical Garden, and the American Society of Plant Taxonomists through the Shirley and Alan Graham Research Grant.
Publisher Copyright:
© 2021 by the American Society of Plant Taxonomists.
PY - 2021/7/1
Y1 - 2021/7/1
N2 - Physarieae is a small tribe of herbaceous annual and woody perennial mustards that are mostly endemic to North America, with its members including a large amount of variation in floral, fruit, and chromosomal variation. Building on a previous study of Physarieae based on morphology and ndhF plastid DNA, we reconstructed the evolutionary history of the tribe using new sequence data from two nuclear markers, and compared the new topologies against previously published cpDNA-based phylogenetic hypotheses. The novel analyses included ca. 420 new sequences of ITS and LUMINIDEPENDENS (LD) markers for 39 and 47 species, respectively, with sampling accounting for all seven genera of Physarieae, including nomenclatural type species, and 11 outgroup taxa. Maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian analyses showed that these additional markers were largely consistent with the previous ndhF data that supported the monophyly of Physarieae and resolved two major clades within the tribe, i.e., DDNLS (Dithyrea, Dimorphocarpa, Nerisyrenia, Lyrocarpa, and Synthlipsis) and PP (Paysonia and Physaria). New analyses also increased internal resolution for some closely related species and lineages within both clades. The monophyly of Dithyrea and the sister relationship of Paysonia to Physaria was consistent in all trees, with the sister relationship of Nerisyrenia to Lyrocarpa supported by ndhF and ITS, and the positions of Dimorphocarpa and Synthlipsis shifted within the DDNLS Clade depending on the employed data set. Finally, using the strong, new phylogenetic framework of combined cpDNA + nDNA data, we discussed standing hypotheses of trichome evolution in the tribe suggested by ndhF.
AB - Physarieae is a small tribe of herbaceous annual and woody perennial mustards that are mostly endemic to North America, with its members including a large amount of variation in floral, fruit, and chromosomal variation. Building on a previous study of Physarieae based on morphology and ndhF plastid DNA, we reconstructed the evolutionary history of the tribe using new sequence data from two nuclear markers, and compared the new topologies against previously published cpDNA-based phylogenetic hypotheses. The novel analyses included ca. 420 new sequences of ITS and LUMINIDEPENDENS (LD) markers for 39 and 47 species, respectively, with sampling accounting for all seven genera of Physarieae, including nomenclatural type species, and 11 outgroup taxa. Maximum parsimony, maximum likelihood, and Bayesian analyses showed that these additional markers were largely consistent with the previous ndhF data that supported the monophyly of Physarieae and resolved two major clades within the tribe, i.e., DDNLS (Dithyrea, Dimorphocarpa, Nerisyrenia, Lyrocarpa, and Synthlipsis) and PP (Paysonia and Physaria). New analyses also increased internal resolution for some closely related species and lineages within both clades. The monophyly of Dithyrea and the sister relationship of Paysonia to Physaria was consistent in all trees, with the sister relationship of Nerisyrenia to Lyrocarpa supported by ndhF and ITS, and the positions of Dimorphocarpa and Synthlipsis shifted within the DDNLS Clade depending on the employed data set. Finally, using the strong, new phylogenetic framework of combined cpDNA + nDNA data, we discussed standing hypotheses of trichome evolution in the tribe suggested by ndhF.
KW - Cruciferae
KW - multiaperturate pollen
KW - mustards
KW - trichomes
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85118898122&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1600/036364421X16312067913318
DO - 10.1600/036364421X16312067913318
M3 - Article
AN - SCOPUS:85118898122
SN - 0363-6445
VL - 46
SP - 611
EP - 627
JO - Systematic Botany
JF - Systematic Botany
IS - 3
ER -