An Efficient, Nonphylogenetic Method for Detecting Genes Sharing Evolutionary Signals in Phylogenomic Data Sets

Author:

Rangel Luiz Thibério1,Soucy Shannon M2,Setubal João C3,Gogarten Johann Peter45ORCID,Fournier Gregory P1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA

2. Department of Biomedical Data Science, Geisel School of Medicine, Dartmouth College, Hanover, New Hampshire, USA

3. Departamento de Bioquímica, Instituto de Química, Universidade de São Paulo, Brasil

4. Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, University of Connecticut, USA

5. Institute for Systems Genomics, University of Connecticut, USA

Abstract

Abstract Assessing the compatibility between gene family phylogenies is a crucial and often computationally demanding step in many phylogenomic analyses. Here, we describe the Evolutionary Similarity Index (IES), a means to assess shared evolution between gene families using a weighted orthogonal distance regression model applied to sequence distances. The utilization of pairwise distance matrices circumvents comparisons between gene tree topologies, which are inherently uncertain and sensitive to evolutionary model choice, phylogenetic reconstruction artifacts, and other sources of error. Furthermore, IES enables the many-to-many pairing of multiple copies between similarly evolving gene families. This is done by selecting non-overlapping pairs of copies, one from each assessed family, and yielding the least sum of squared residuals. Analyses of simulated gene family data sets show that IES’s accuracy is on par with popular tree-based methods while also less susceptible to noise introduced by sequence alignment and evolutionary model fitting. Applying IES to an empirical data set of 1,322 genes from 42 archaeal genomes identified eight major clusters of gene families with compatible evolutionary trends. The most cohesive cluster consisted of 62 genes with compatible evolutionary signal, which occur as both single-copy and multiple homologs per genome; phylogenetic analysis of concatenated alignments from this cluster produced a tree closely matching previously published species trees for Archaea. Four other clusters are mainly composed of accessory genes with limited distribution among Archaea and enriched toward specific metabolic functions. Pairwise evolutionary distances obtained from these accessory gene clusters suggest patterns of interphyla horizontal gene transfer. An IES implementation is available at https://github.com/lthiberiol/evolSimIndex.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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