Eukaryotic gene trees with 150 leaves
Gene loss is an important process in gene and genome evolution. If a gene is present at the root of a rooted binary phylogenetic tree and can be lost in one descendant lineage, it can be lost in other descendant lineages as well, and potentially can be lost in all of them, leading to extinction of t...
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Zusammenfassung: | Gene loss is an important process in gene and genome evolution. If a gene
is present at the root of a rooted binary phylogenetic tree and can be
lost in one descendant lineage, it can be lost in other descendant
lineages as well, and potentially can be lost in all of them, leading to
extinction of the gene on the tree. In that case, just before the gene
goes extinct in the rooted phylogeny, there will be one lineage that still
retains the gene for some period of time, representing a ‘last-one-out’
distribution. If there are many (hundreds) of leaves in one clade of a
phylogenetic tree, yet only one leaf possesses the gene, it will look like
the result of a recent gene acquisition, even though the distribution at
the tips was generated by loss. Here we derive the probability of
observing last-one-out distributions under a Markovian loss model and a
given gene loss rate μ. We find that the probability of observing such
cases can be calculated mathematically, and can be surprisingly high,
depending upon the tree and the rate of gene loss. Examples from real data
show that gene loss can readily account for the observed frequency of
last-one-out gene distribution patterns that might otherwise be attributed
to lateral gene transfer. |
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DOI: | 10.5061/dryad.612jm649v |