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Citation for Study 1987

About Citation title: "Genomic outposts serve the phylogenomic pioneers: designing novel nuclear markers for genomic DNA extractions of Lepidoptera.".
About This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1972 (Status: Published).

Citation

Wahlberg N., & Wheat C. 2008. Genomic outposts serve the phylogenomic pioneers: designing novel nuclear markers for genomic DNA extractions of Lepidoptera. Systematic Biology, 57(2): 231-242.

Authors

  • Wahlberg N.
  • Wheat C.

Abstract

Increasing the number of characters used in phylogenetic studies is the next crucial step towards generating robust and stable phylogenetic hypotheses- i.e. strongly supported and consistent across reconstruction method. Here we describe a genomic approach to finding new protein-coding genes for systematics in non-model taxa, which can be PCR amplified from standard, slightly degraded genomic DNA extracts. We test this approach on Lepidoptera, searching the draft genomic sequence of the silk moth /Bombyx mori/, for exons > 500 bp in length, removing annotated gene families, and compared remaining exons with butterfly EST databases to identify conserved regions for primer design. These primers were tested on a set of 65 taxa primarily in the butterfly family Nymphalidae. We were able to identify and amplify 6 previously unused gene regions (Arginine Kinase, GAPDH, IDH, MDH, RpS2 and RpS5) and two rarely used gene regions (CAD and DDC) that when added to the three traditional gene regions (COI, EF-1? and wingless) gave a dataset of 8114 bp. Phylogenetic robustness and stability increased with increasing numbers of genes. Smaller taxanomic subsets were also robust when using the full gene dataset. The full 11 gene dataset was robust and stable across reconstruction methods, recovering the major lineages and strongly supporting relationships within them. Our methods and insights should be applicable to taxonomic groups having a single genomic reference species and several EST databases from taxa that diverged less than 100 million years ago.

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  • Canonical resource URI: http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S1987
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