Abstract
Species tree inference from gene family trees is becoming increasingly popular because it can account for discordance between the species tree and the corresponding gene family trees. In particular, methods that can account for multiple-copy gene families exhibit potential to leverage paralogy as informative signal. At present, there does not exist any widely adopted inference method for this purpose. Here, we present SpeciesRax, the first maximum likelihood method that can infer a rooted species tree from a set of gene family trees and can account for gene duplication, loss, and transfer events. By explicitly modeling events by which gene trees can depart from the species tree, SpeciesRax leverages the phylogenetic rooting signal in gene trees. SpeciesRax infers species tree branch lengths in units of expected substitutions per site and branch support values via paralogy-aware quartets extracted from the gene family trees. Using both empirical and simulated data sets we show that SpeciesRax is at least as accurate as the best competing methods while being one order of magnitude faster on large data sets at the same time. We used SpeciesRax to infer a biologically plausible rooted phylogeny of the vertebrates comprising 188 species from 31,612 gene families in 1 h using 40 cores. SpeciesRax is available under GNU GPL at https://github.com/BenoitMorel/GeneRax and on BioConda.
| Original language | English |
|---|---|
| Article number | msab365 |
| Journal | Molecular Biology and Evolution |
| Volume | 39 |
| Issue number | 2 |
| Early online date | 11 Jan 2022 |
| DOIs | |
| Publication status | Published - 3 Feb 2022 |
Bibliographical note
Publisher Copyright:© 2022 The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.
Acknowledgements
This work was financially supported by the Klaus Tschira Foundation and by DFG grant STA 860/6-2. G.J.S. received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union’s Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under grant agreement no. 714774 and the grant GINOP-2.3.2.-15-2016-00057. T.A.W. was supported by a Royal Society University Fellowship and NERC grant NE/P00251X/1. This work was funded by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through grant GBMF9741 to T.A.W. and G.J.S.Keywords
- gene duplication
- gene family tree
- gene loss
- horizontal gene transfer
- maximum likelihood
- species tree inference
ASJC Scopus subject areas
- Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics
- Molecular Biology
- Genetics