@ARTICLE{TreeBASE2Ref15394,
author = {Astrid Farwick and Ursula Jordan and Georg Fuellen and Doroth?e Huchon and Fran?ois Catzeflis and Juergen Brosius and Juergen Schmitz},
title = {Automated Scanning for Phylogenetically Informative Transposed Elements in Rodents.},
year = {2006},
keywords = {},
doi = {10.1080/10635150601064806},
url = {},
pmid = {},
journal = {Systematic Biology},
volume = {55},
number = {6},
pages = {936--948},
abstract = {Transposed elements constitute an attractive, useful source of phylogenetic markers to elucidate the evolutionary history of their hosts. Frequent and successive amplifications over evolutionary time are important requirements for utilizing their presence or absence as landmarks of evolution. Although transposed elements are well distributed in rodent taxa, the generally high degree of genomic sequence divergence among species complicates our access to presence/absence data. With this in mind we developed a novel, high throughput computational strategy, called CPAL (Conserved Presence/Absence Locus finder), to identify genome-wide distributed, phylogenetically informative transposed elements flanked by highly conserved regions. From a total of 232 extracted chromosomal mouse loci we randomly selected 14 of these plus 2 others from previous test screens and attempted to amplify them via PCR in representative rodent species. All loci were amplifiable and ultimately contributed 31 phylogenetically informative markers distributed throughout the major groups of Rodentia.}
}
Trees for Study 1619
Citation title: "Automated Scanning for Phylogenetically Informative Transposed Elements in Rodents.".
This study was previously identified under the legacy study ID S1568
(Status: Published).
Trees
ID | Tree Label | Tree Title | Tree Type | Tree Kind | Taxa | ||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Tr734 | Fig. S-1 | Rodents | Consensus | Species Tree | View Taxa |