Radiation history of Asian Asarum (sect. Heterotropa, Aristolochiaceae) resolved using a phylogenomic approach based on double-digested RAD-seq data

The genus Asarum sect. Heterotropa (Aristolochiaceae) likely experienced rapid diversification into 62 species centred on the Japanese Archipelago and Taiwan, providing an ideal model for studying island adaptive radiation. However, resolving the phylogeny of this plant group using Sanger sequencing...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of botany 2020-04, Vol.126 (2), p.245-260
Hauptverfasser: Okuyama, Yudai, Goto, Nana, Nagano, Atsushi J, Yasugi, Masaki, Kokubugata, Goro, Kudoh, Hiroshi, Qi, Zhechen, Ito, Takuro, Kakishima, Satoshi, Sugawara, Takashi
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:The genus Asarum sect. Heterotropa (Aristolochiaceae) likely experienced rapid diversification into 62 species centred on the Japanese Archipelago and Taiwan, providing an ideal model for studying island adaptive radiation. However, resolving the phylogeny of this plant group using Sanger sequencing-based approaches has been challenging. To uncover the radiation history of Heterotropa, we employed a phylogenomic approach using double-digested RAD-seq (ddRAD-seq) to yield a sufficient number of phylogenetic signals and compared its utility with that of the Sanger sequencing-based approach. We first compared the performance of phylogenetic analysis based on the plastid matK and trnL-F regions and nuclear ribosomal ITS and phylogenomic analysis based on ddRAD-seq using a reduced set of the plant materials (83 plant accessions consisting of 52 species, 1 subspecies and 5 varieties). We also conducted more thorough phylogenomic analyses including the reconstruction of biogeographic history using comprehensive samples of 135 plant accessions consisting of 55 species, 1 subspecies, 8 varieties of Heterotropa, and 6 outgroup species. Phylogenomic analyses of Heterotropa based on ddRAD-seq were superior to Sanger sequencing-based approaches and resulted in a fully resolved phylogenetic tree with strong support for 72.0-84.8% (depending on the tree-reconstruction methods) of the branches. We clarified the history of Heterotropa radiation and found that A. forbesii, the only deciduous Heterotropa species native to mainland China, is sister to the evergreen species (core Heterotropa) mostly distributed across the Japanese Archipelago and Taiwan. The core Heterotropa group was divided into nine subclades, each of which had a narrow geographic distribution. Moreover, most estimated dispersal events (22 out of 24) were between adjacent areas, indicating that the range expansion has been geographically restricted throughout the radiation history. The findings enhance our understanding of the remarkable diversification of plant lineages in the Japanese Archipelago and Taiwan.
ISSN:0305-7364
1095-8290
DOI:10.1093/aob/mcaa072