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A Robust Phylogenomic Time Tree for Biotechnologically and Medically Important Fungi in the Genera Aspergillus and Penicillium
by
Rokas, Antonis
, Steenwyk, Jacob L.
, Shen, Xing-Xing
, Goldman, Gustavo H.
, Lind, Abigail L.
in
Amino acids
/ Antibiotics
/ Aspergillus
/ Aspergillus - classification
/ Aspergillus - genetics
/ Biotechnology
/ Branches
/ Cholesterol
/ Cretaceous
/ Debates
/ Ecological and Evolutionary Science
/ Evolution
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Food industry
/ Fungi
/ Genera
/ Genes
/ Genome, Fungal
/ Genomes
/ Genomic analysis
/ Genomics
/ Heterogeneity
/ Interspecific hybridization
/ Metabolites
/ Pathogens
/ Penicillin
/ Penicillium
/ Penicillium - classification
/ Penicillium - genetics
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Sequence Analysis, DNA
/ Species
/ Taxonomy
2019
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A Robust Phylogenomic Time Tree for Biotechnologically and Medically Important Fungi in the Genera Aspergillus and Penicillium
by
Rokas, Antonis
, Steenwyk, Jacob L.
, Shen, Xing-Xing
, Goldman, Gustavo H.
, Lind, Abigail L.
in
Amino acids
/ Antibiotics
/ Aspergillus
/ Aspergillus - classification
/ Aspergillus - genetics
/ Biotechnology
/ Branches
/ Cholesterol
/ Cretaceous
/ Debates
/ Ecological and Evolutionary Science
/ Evolution
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Food industry
/ Fungi
/ Genera
/ Genes
/ Genome, Fungal
/ Genomes
/ Genomic analysis
/ Genomics
/ Heterogeneity
/ Interspecific hybridization
/ Metabolites
/ Pathogens
/ Penicillin
/ Penicillium
/ Penicillium - classification
/ Penicillium - genetics
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Sequence Analysis, DNA
/ Species
/ Taxonomy
2019
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A Robust Phylogenomic Time Tree for Biotechnologically and Medically Important Fungi in the Genera Aspergillus and Penicillium
by
Rokas, Antonis
, Steenwyk, Jacob L.
, Shen, Xing-Xing
, Goldman, Gustavo H.
, Lind, Abigail L.
in
Amino acids
/ Antibiotics
/ Aspergillus
/ Aspergillus - classification
/ Aspergillus - genetics
/ Biotechnology
/ Branches
/ Cholesterol
/ Cretaceous
/ Debates
/ Ecological and Evolutionary Science
/ Evolution
/ Evolution, Molecular
/ Food industry
/ Fungi
/ Genera
/ Genes
/ Genome, Fungal
/ Genomes
/ Genomic analysis
/ Genomics
/ Heterogeneity
/ Interspecific hybridization
/ Metabolites
/ Pathogens
/ Penicillin
/ Penicillium
/ Penicillium - classification
/ Penicillium - genetics
/ Phylogenetics
/ Phylogeny
/ Sequence Analysis, DNA
/ Species
/ Taxonomy
2019
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A Robust Phylogenomic Time Tree for Biotechnologically and Medically Important Fungi in the Genera Aspergillus and Penicillium
Journal Article
A Robust Phylogenomic Time Tree for Biotechnologically and Medically Important Fungi in the Genera Aspergillus and Penicillium
2019
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Overview
Understanding the evolution of traits across technologically and medically significant fungi requires a robust phylogeny. Even though species in the
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
genera (family
Aspergillaceae
, class Eurotiomycetes) are some of the most significant technologically and medically relevant fungi, we still lack a genome-scale phylogeny of the lineage or knowledge of the parts of the phylogeny that exhibit conflict among analyses. Here, we used a phylogenomic approach to infer evolutionary relationships among 81 genomes that span the diversity of
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
species, to identify conflicts in the phylogeny, and to determine the likely underlying factors of the observed conflicts. Using a data matrix comprised of 1,668 genes, we found that while most branches of the phylogeny of the
Aspergillaceae
are robustly supported and recovered irrespective of method of analysis, a few exhibit various degrees of conflict among our analyses. Further examination of the observed conflict revealed that it largely stems from incomplete lineage sorting and hybridization or introgression. Our analyses provide a robust and comprehensive evolutionary genomic roadmap for this important lineage, which will facilitate the examination of the diverse technologically and medically relevant traits of these fungi in an evolutionary context.
The filamentous fungal family
Aspergillaceae
contains >1,000 known species, mostly in the genera
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
. Several species are used in the food, biotechnology, and drug industries (e.g.,
Aspergillus oryzae
and
Penicillium camemberti
), while others are dangerous human and plant pathogens (e.g.,
Aspergillus fumigatus
and
Penicillium digitatum
). To infer a robust phylogeny and pinpoint poorly resolved branches and their likely underlying contributors, we used 81 genomes spanning the diversity of
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
to construct a 1,668-gene data matrix. Phylogenies of the nucleotide and amino acid versions of this full data matrix as well as of several additional data matrices were generated using three different maximum likelihood schemes (i.e., gene-partitioned, unpartitioned, and coalescence) and using both site-homogenous and site-heterogeneous models (total of 64 species-level phylogenies). Examination of the topological agreement among these phylogenies and measures of internode certainty identified 11/78 (14.1%) bipartitions that were incongruent and pinpointed the likely underlying contributing factors, which included incomplete lineage sorting, hidden paralogy, hybridization or introgression, and reconstruction artifacts associated with poor taxon sampling. Relaxed molecular clock analyses suggest that
Aspergillaceae
likely originated in the lower Cretaceous and that the
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
genera originated in the upper Cretaceous. Our results shed light on the ongoing debate on
Aspergillus
systematics and taxonomy and provide a robust evolutionary and temporal framework for comparative genomic analyses in
Aspergillaceae
. More broadly, our approach provides a general template for phylogenomic identification of resolved and contentious branches in densely genome-sequenced lineages across the tree of life.
IMPORTANCE
Understanding the evolution of traits across technologically and medically significant fungi requires a robust phylogeny. Even though species in the
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
genera (family
Aspergillaceae
, class Eurotiomycetes) are some of the most significant technologically and medically relevant fungi, we still lack a genome-scale phylogeny of the lineage or knowledge of the parts of the phylogeny that exhibit conflict among analyses. Here, we used a phylogenomic approach to infer evolutionary relationships among 81 genomes that span the diversity of
Aspergillus
and
Penicillium
species, to identify conflicts in the phylogeny, and to determine the likely underlying factors of the observed conflicts. Using a data matrix comprised of 1,668 genes, we found that while most branches of the phylogeny of the
Aspergillaceae
are robustly supported and recovered irrespective of method of analysis, a few exhibit various degrees of conflict among our analyses. Further examination of the observed conflict revealed that it largely stems from incomplete lineage sorting and hybridization or introgression. Our analyses provide a robust and comprehensive evolutionary genomic roadmap for this important lineage, which will facilitate the examination of the diverse technologically and medically relevant traits of these fungi in an evolutionary context.
Publisher
American Society for Microbiology
Subject
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