Data from: Vitis phylogenomics: hybridization intensities from a SNP array outperform genotype calls
Understanding relationships among species is a fundamental goal of evolutionary biology. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) identified through next generation sequencing and related technologies enable phylogeny reconstruction by providing unprecedented numbers of characters for analysis. One ap...
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Zusammenfassung: | Understanding relationships among species is a fundamental goal of
evolutionary biology. Single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) identified
through next generation sequencing and related technologies enable
phylogeny reconstruction by providing unprecedented numbers of characters
for analysis. One approach to SNP-based phylogeny reconstruction is to
identify SNPs in a subset of individuals, and then to compile SNPs on an
array that can be used to genotype additional samples at hundreds or
thousands of sites simultaneously. Although powerful and efficient, this
method is subject to ascertainment bias because applying variation
discovered in a representative subset to a larger sample favors
identification of SNPs with high minor allele frequencies and introduces
bias against rare alleles. Here, we demonstrate that the use of
hybridization intensity data, rather than genotype calls, reduces the
effects of ascertainment bias. Whereas traditional SNP calls assess known
variants based on diversity housed in the discovery panel, hybridization
intensity data survey variation in the broader sample pool, regardless of
whether those variants are present in the initial SNP discovery process.
We apply SNP genotype and hybridization intensity data derived from the
Vitis9kSNP array developed for grape to show the effects of ascertainment
bias and to reconstruct evolutionary relationships among Vitis species. We
demonstrate that phylogenies constructed using hybridization intensities
suffer less from the distorting effects of ascertainment bias, and are
thus more accurate than phylogenies based on genotype calls. Moreover, we
reconstruct the phylogeny of the genus Vitis using hybridization data,
show that North American subgenus Vitis species are monophyletic, and
resolve several previously poorly known relationships among North American
species. This study builds on earlier work that applied the Vitis9kSNP
array to evolutionary questions within Vitis vinifera and has general
implications for addressing ascertainment bias in array-enabled phylogeny
reconstruction. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.4181f |