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result(s) for
"Nymphaeales"
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The water lily genome and the early evolution of flowering plants
2020
Water lilies belong to the angiosperm order Nymphaeales. Amborellales, Nymphaeales and Austrobaileyales together form the so-called ANA-grade of angiosperms, which are extant representatives of lineages that diverged the earliest from the lineage leading to the extant mesangiosperms
1
–
3
. Here we report the 409-megabase genome sequence of the blue-petal water lily (
Nymphaea colorata
). Our phylogenomic analyses support Amborellales and Nymphaeales as successive sister lineages to all other extant angiosperms. The
N. colorata
genome and 19 other water lily transcriptomes reveal a Nymphaealean whole-genome duplication event, which is shared by Nymphaeaceae and possibly Cabombaceae. Among the genes retained from this whole-genome duplication are homologues of genes that regulate flowering transition and flower development. The broad expression of homologues of floral ABCE genes in
N. colorata
might support a similarly broadly active ancestral ABCE model of floral organ determination in early angiosperms. Water lilies have evolved attractive floral scents and colours, which are features shared with mesangiosperms, and we identified their putative biosynthetic genes in
N. colorata
. The chemical compounds and biosynthetic genes behind floral scents suggest that they have evolved in parallel to those in mesangiosperms. Because of its unique phylogenetic position, the
N. colorata
genome sheds light on the early evolution of angiosperms.
The genome of the tropical blue-petal water lily
Nymphaea colorata
and the transcriptomes from 19 other Nymphaeales species provide insights into the early evolution of angiosperms.
Journal Article
Quartet Sampling distinguishes lack of support from conflicting support in the green plant tree of life
by
Brown, Joseph W.
,
Hinchliff, Cody E.
,
Smith, Stephen A.
in
Amborella
,
Angiosperms
,
Austrobaileyales
2018
Premise of the Study Phylogenetic support has been difficult to evaluate within the green plant tree of life partly due to a lack of specificity between conflicted versus poorly informed branches. As data sets continue to expand in both breadth and depth, new support measures are needed that are more efficient and informative. Methods We describe the Quartet Sampling (QS) method, a quartet‐based evaluation system that synthesizes several phylogenetic and genomic analytical approaches. QS characterizes discordance in large‐sparse and genome‐wide data sets, overcoming issues of alignment sparsity and distinguishing strong conflict from weak support. We tested QS with simulations and recent plant phylogenies inferred from variously sized data sets. Key Results QS scores demonstrated convergence with increasing replicates and were not strongly affected by branch depth. Patterns of QS support from different phylogenies led to a coherent understanding of ancestral branches defining key disagreements, including the relationships of Ginkgo to cycads, magnoliids to monocots and eudicots, and mosses to liverworts. The relationships of ANA‐grade angiosperms (Amborella, Nymphaeales, Austrobaileyales), major monocot groups, bryophytes, and fern families are likely highly discordant in their evolutionary histories, rather than poorly informed. QS can also detect discordance due to introgression in phylogenomic data. Conclusions Quartet Sampling is an efficient synthesis of phylogenetic tests that offers more comprehensive and specific information on branch support than conventional measures. The QS method corroborates growing evidence that phylogenomic investigations that incorporate discordance testing are warranted when reconstructing complex evolutionary histories, in particular those surrounding ANA‐grade, monocots, and nonvascular plants.
Journal Article
Plastid phylogenomic analysis of green plants
by
Ruhfel, Brad R.
,
Soltis, Pamela S.
,
Wong, Gane K.-S.
in
Amborella
,
Amino Acid Sequence
,
Amino Acids
2018
Premise of the Study For the past one billion years, green plants (Viridiplantae) have dominated global ecosystems, yet many key branches in their evolutionary history remain poorly resolved. Using the largest analysis of Viridiplantae based on plastid genome sequences to date, we examined the phylogeny and implications for morphological evolution at key nodes. Methods We analyzed amino acid sequences from protein‐coding genes from complete (or nearly complete) plastomes for 1879 taxa, including representatives across all major clades of Viridiplantae. Much of the data used was derived from transcriptomes from the One Thousand Plants Project (1KP); other data were taken from GenBank. Key Results Our results largely agree with previous plastid‐based analyses. Noteworthy results include (1) the position of Zygnematophyceae as sister to land plants (Embryophyta), (2) a bryophyte clade (hornworts, mosses + liverworts), (3) Equisetum + Psilotaceae as sister to Marattiales + leptosporangiate ferns, (4) cycads + Ginkgo as sister to the remaining extant gymnosperms, within which Gnetophyta are placed within conifers as sister to non‐Pinaceae (Gne‐Cup hypothesis), and (5) Amborella, followed by water lilies (Nymphaeales), as successive sisters to all other extant angiosperms. Within angiosperms, there is support for Mesangiospermae, a clade that comprises magnoliids, Chloranthales, monocots, Ceratophyllum, and eudicots. The placements of Ceratophyllum and Dilleniaceae remain problematic. Within Pentapetalae, two major clades (superasterids and superrosids) are recovered. Conclusions This plastid data set provides an important resource for elucidating morphological evolution, dating divergence times in Viridiplantae, comparisons with emerging nuclear phylogenies, and analyses of molecular evolutionary patterns and dynamics of the plastid genome.
Journal Article
The complete mitochondrial genome of the early flowering plant Nymphaea colorata is highly repetitive with low recombination
by
Chen, Fei
,
Liu, Yanhui
,
Zhang, Shouzhou
in
Amborella
,
Angiosperms
,
Animal Genetics and Genomics
2018
Background
Mitochondrial genomes of flowering plants (angiosperms) are highly dynamic in genome structure. The mitogenome of the earliest angiosperm
Amborella
is remarkable in carrying rampant foreign DNAs, in contrast to
Liriodendron
, the other only known early angiosperm mitogenome that is described as ‘fossilized’. The distinctive features observed in the two early flowering plant mitogenomes add to the current confusions of what early flowering plants look like. Expanded sampling would provide more details in understanding the mitogenomic evolution of early angiosperms. Here we report the complete mitochondrial genome of water lily
Nymphaea colorata
from Nymphaeales, one of the three orders of the earliest angiosperms.
Results
Assembly of data from Pac-Bio long-read sequencing yielded a circular mitochondria chromosome of 617,195 bp with an average depth of 601×. The genome encoded 41 protein coding genes, 20 tRNA and three rRNA genes with 25 group II introns disrupting 10 protein coding genes. Nearly half of the genome is composed of repeated sequences, which contributed substantially to the intron size expansion, making the gross intron length of the
Nymphaea
mitochondrial genome one of the longest among angiosperms, including an 11.4-Kb intron in
cox2
, which is the longest organellar intron reported to date in plants. Nevertheless, repeat mediated homologous recombination is unexpectedly low in
Nymphaea
evidenced by 74 recombined reads detected from ten recombinationally active repeat pairs among 886,982 repeat pairs examined. Extensive gene order changes were detected in the three early angiosperm mitogenomes, i.e. 38 or 44 events of inversions and translocations are needed to reconcile the mitogenome of
Nymphaea
with
Amborella
or
Liriodendron
, respectively. In contrast to
Amborella
with six genome equivalents of foreign mitochondrial DNA, not a single horizontal gene transfer event was observed in the
Nymphaea
mitogenome.
Conclusions
The
Nymphaea
mitogenome resembles the other available early angiosperm mitogenomes by a similarly rich 64-coding gene set, and many conserved gene clusters, whereas stands out by its highly repetitive nature and resultant remarkable intron expansions. The low recombination level in
Nymphaea
provides evidence for the predominant master conformation in vivo with a highly substoichiometric set of rearranged molecules.
Journal Article
Coalescent versus Concatenation Methods and the Placement of Amborella as Sister to Water Lilies
by
Davis, Charles C.
,
Rest, Joshua S.
,
Xi, Zhenxiang
in
Angiosperms
,
Aquatic plants
,
Biodiversity
2014
The molecular era has fundamentally reshaped our knowledge of the evolution and diversification of angiosperms. One outstanding question is the phylogenetic placement of Amborella trichopoda Baill., commonly thought represent the first lineage of extant angiosperms. Here, we leverage publicly available data and provide a broad coalescentbased species tree estimation of 45 seed plants. By incorporating 310 nuclear genes, our coalescent analyses strongly support a clade containing Amborella plus water lilies (i.e., Nymphaeales) that is sister to all other angiosperms across different nucleotide rate partitions. Our results also show that commonly applied concatenation methods produce strongly supported, but incongruent placements of Amborella: slow-evolving nucleotide sites corroborate results from coalescent analyses, whereas fast-evolving sites place Amborella alone as the first lineage of extant angiosperms. We further explored the performance of coalescent versus concatenation methods using nucleotide sequences simulated on (i) the two alternate placements of Amborella with branch lengths and substitution model parameters estimated from each of the 310 nuclear genes and (ii) three hypothetical species trees that are topologically identical except with respect to the degree of deep coalescence and branch lengths. Our results collectively suggest that the Amborella alone placement inferred using concatenation methods is likely misled by fast-evolving sites. This appears to be exacerbated by the combination of long branches in stem group angiosperms, Amborella, and Nymphaeales with the short internal branch separating Amborella and Nymphaeales. In contrast, coalescent methods appear to be more robust to elevated substitution rates.
Journal Article
Imprinting and DNA Methylation in Water Lily Endosperm: Implications for Seed Evolution
by
Gehring, Mary
,
Bechen, Lindsey L
,
Povilus, Rebecca A
in
Angiosperms
,
Biological Evolution
,
Deoxyribonucleic acid
2025
Abstract
Endosperm is a key evolutionary innovation associated with the origin of angiosperms (flowering plants). This altruistic seed tissue supports the growth and development of the embryo by mediating the relationship of the mother plant as a nutrient source to the compatriot embryo as a nutrient sink. The endosperm is the primary site of gene imprinting in plants (where expression of an allele in offspring depends on which parent it was inherited from) and of parent-specific epigenetic modifications like DNA methylation, which are differentially patterned during male and female gamete development. Experimental results from a phylogenetically wide array of monocot and eudicot plants suggest these parent-of-origin effects are a common feature across angiosperms. However, information about genomic imprinting and epigenetic modifications in seeds of angiosperm lineages whose origins predate the monocot–eudicot divergence (such as Nymphaeales, water lilies) is extremely limited. Additionally, Nymphaeales are an intriguing lineage in which to investigate seed genetic and epigenetic phenomena, as they are characterized by diploid endosperm and a maternal storage tissue (perisperm), both of which are unusual across angiosperm diversity. Here, we examined DNA methylation and gene imprinting using two reproductively compatible water lily sister species, Nymphaea thermarum and Nymphaea dimorpha. Our results suggest that maternally expressed imprinted genes and differential DNA methylation of maternally and paternally inherited endosperm genomes are an ancestral condition for endosperm, whereas other seed characters like seed provisioning strategies, endosperm ploidy, and paternally expressed imprinted genes might have evolved as coinciding, opposing strategies in the evolutionary dialogue over parental control of offspring development.
Journal Article
Angiosperm phylogeny: 17 genes, 640 taxa
2011
Premise of the study. Recent analyses employing up to five genes have provided numerous insights into angiosperm phylogeny, but many relationships have remained unresolved or poorly supported. In the hope of improving our understanding of angiosperm phylogeny, we expanded sampling of taxa and genes beyond previous analyses. Methods: We conducted two primary analyses based on 640 species representing 330 families. The first included 25260 aligned base pairs (bp) from 17 genes (representing all three plant genomes, i. e., nucleus, plastid, and mitochondrion). The second included 19846 aligned bp from 13 genes (representing only the nucleus and plastid). Key results: Many important questions of deep-level relationships in the nonmonocot angiosperms have now been resolved with strong support. Amborellaceae, Nymphaeales, and Austrobaileyales are successive sisters to the remaining angiosperms (Mesangiospermae), which are resolved into Chloranthales + Magnoliidae as sister to Monocotyledoneae + [Ceratophyllaceae + Eudicotyledoneae]. Eudicotyledoneae contains a basal grade subtending Gunneridae. Within Gunneridae, Gunnerales are sister to the remainder (Pentapetalae), which comprises (1) Superrosidae, consisting of Rosidae (including Vitaceae) and Saxifragales; and (2) Superasteridae, comprising Berberidopsidales, Santalales, CaryophyHales, Asteridae, and, based on this study, Dilleniaceae (although other recent analyses disagree with this placement). Within the major subclades of Pentapetalae, most deep-level relationships are resolved with strong support. Conclusions: Our analyses confirm that with large amounts of sequence data, most deep-level relationships within the angiosperms can be resolved. We anticipate that this well-resolved angiosperm tree will be of broad utility for many areas of biology, including physiology, ecology, paleobiology, and genomics.
Journal Article
Analysis of 81 genes from 64 plastid genomes resolves relationships in angiosperms and identifies genome-scale evolutionary patterns
by
Haberle, Rosemarie C
,
dePamphilis, Claude W
,
Leebens-Mack, James
in
Angiospermae
,
Angiosperms
,
Biological Sciences
2007
Angiosperms are the largest and most successful clade of land plants with >250,000 species distributed in nearly every terrestrial habitat. Many phylogenetic studies have been based on DNA sequences of one to several genes, but, despite decades of intensive efforts, relationships among early diverging lineages and several of the major clades remain either incompletely resolved or weakly supported. We performed phylogenetic analyses of 81 plastid genes in 64 sequenced genomes, including 13 new genomes, to estimate relationships among the major angiosperm clades, and the resulting trees are used to examine the evolution of gene and intron content. Phylogenetic trees from multiple methods, including model-based approaches, provide strong support for the position of Amborella as the earliest diverging lineage of flowering plants, followed by Nymphaeales and Austrobaileyales. The plastid genome trees also provide strong support for a sister relationship between eudicots and monocots, and this group is sister to a clade that includes Chloranthales and magnoliids. Resolution of relationships among the major clades of angiosperms provides the necessary framework for addressing numerous evolutionary questions regarding the rapid diversification of angiosperms. Gene and intron content are highly conserved among the early diverging angiosperms and basal eudicots, but 62 independent gene and intron losses are limited to the more derived monocot and eudicot clades. Moreover, a lineage-specific correlation was detected between rates of nucleotide substitutions, indels, and genomic rearrangements.
Journal Article
Phylogenomics of angiosperms based on mitochondrial genes: insights into deep node relationships
2025
Background
Angiosperms are the largest plant group and play an essential role in the biosphere. Phylogenetic relationships of many families and orders remain contentious, and, in an attempt to address these, we performed the most extensive sampling of mitochondrial genes to date.
Results
We reconstructed a seed plant phylogenetic framework based on 41 mitochondrial protein-coding sequences (mtCDSs), representing 335 families and 63 orders with 481 angiosperm species. The results for major clades of angiosperms produced moderate to strong support (> 70% bootstrap) for more than 80% of nodes and strong support for most orders. Eight major nodes were supported, including the three paraphyletic ANA orders (Amborellales, Nymphaeales, and Austrobaileyales) and five major core-angiosperm clades. Chloranthales and Ceratophyllales are sister to the eudicots, whereas the monocots are sister to the magnoliids. Although well-supported, relationships within the asterids and rosids were in some cases unresolved or weakly supported, due to the low levels of variability detected in these genes.
Conclusions
Our results indicated that mitochondrial genomic data were effective at resolving deep node relationships of angiosperm phylogeny and thus represent an important resource for phylogenetics and evolutionary studies of angiosperm.
Journal Article
Ancestral traits and specializations in the flowers of the basal grade of living angiosperms
2015
New morphological and phylogenetic data prompt us to present an updated review of floral morphology and its evolution in the basal ANITA grade of living angiosperms, Chloranthaceae, and Ceratophyllum. Floral phyllotaxis is complex whorled in Nymphaeales and spiral in Amborella and Austrobaileyales. It is unresolved whether phyllotaxis was ancestrally whorled or spiral, but if it was whorled, the whorls were trimerous. The flowers are probably ancestrally bisexual because in most families with unisexual flowers these flowers exhibit rudiments of the opposite sex. Carpels are largely ascidiate and the closure line is short, either transverse or longitudinal. A style is usually absent or, if present, generally short and not plicate. Angiospermy (carpel sealing) is by secretion, rather than postgenital fusion, except in large‐flowered Nymphaeales and in Illicium, correlated with unusual fruits. Carpels with a single, median, pendent ovule are probably plesiomorphic. Chloranth‐ aceae and Ceratophyllaceae have an unsettled phylogenetic position, but in some phylogenetic analyses they form a clade, which may be sister to the remaining mesangiosperms (Magnoliidae, monocots, eudicots). This position is supported by their carpel characters, which are similar to those of the ANITA grade and different from those of most other mesangiosperms.
Journal Article