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Published byMaribel Arnall Modified over 10 years ago
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RICE PHYLOGENY REVISITED N. K H I R I P E T AND V. POTLURI
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Some Background Rice is staple for more than half of the world’s population Large collection of germplasm [ >10000 accessions] held at IRRI Plant breeders/genecists use these to develop news cultivars For this purpose, evolutionary history/phylogeny is important
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Rice genetics Rice is usually a diploid, but tetraploids are not uncommon The diploid genome is classified as AA,BB,CC,DD,EE,FF,GG,HH.KK The tetraploids are mostly allo BBCC,CCDD,HHJJ,HHKK
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Taxa in the Genus Oryza: the species and genome groups Table 1-1. Taxa in the genus Oryza: the species and genome groups. [From IRRI] Species2nGenomeDistribution Sect. Oryza Ser. Sativae Sect. Oryza Ser. Sativae O. barthii 24 AA Sub-Saharan Africa O. glaberrima 24 AA West Africa O. glumaepatula 24 AA South, Central America O. longistaminata 24 AA Sub-Saharan Africa O. meridionalis 24 AA Tropical Australia O. nivara 24 AA Tropical, Subtropical Asia O. rufipogon 24 AA Tropical, Subtropical Asia, Tropical Australia O. sativa 24 AA Worldwide Ser. Latifoliae O. eichingeri 24 CC South Asia, East Africa O. eichingeri 24 CC South Asia, East Africa O. alta 48 CCDD South, Central America O. alta 48 CCDD South, Central America O. grandiglumis 48 CCDD South, Central America O. grandiglumis 48 CCDD South, Central America O. latifolia 48 CCDD South, Central America O. latifolia 48 CCDD South, Central America O. minuta 48 BBCC Philippines, Papua New Guinea O. minuta 48 BBCC Philippines, Papua New Guinea O. punctata 24, 48 BB, BBCC Sub-Saharan Africa O. punctata 24, 48 BB, BBCC Sub-Saharan Africa O. rhizomatis 24 CC Sri Lanka O. rhizomatis 24 CC Sri Lanka O. officinalis 24,48 CC, BBCC Tropical, Subtropical Asia O. officinalis 24,48 CC, BBCC Tropical, Subtropical Asia Ser. Australienses O. australiensis 24 EE ropical Australia O. australiensis 24 EE ropical Australia Sect. Brachyantha Ser. Brachyanthae Sect. Brachyantha Ser. Brachyanthae O. brachyantha 24 FF Sub-Saharan Africa O. brachyantha 24 FF Sub-Saharan Africa Sect. Padia Ser. Meyerianae Sect. Padia Ser. Meyerianae O. granulata 24 GG South, Southeast Asia O. granulata 24 GG South, Southeast Asia O. meyeriana 24 GG Southeast Asia O. meyeriana 24 GG Southeast Asia O. neocaledonica 24 ?? New Caledonia O. neocaledonica 24 ?? New Caledonia Ser. Ridleyanae Ser. Ridleyanae O. longiglumis 48 HHJJ Indonesia (Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea O. longiglumis 48 HHJJ Indonesia (Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea O. ridleyi 48HHJJSoutheast Asia O. ridleyi 48HHJJSoutheast Asia Ser. Schlechterianae Ser. Schlechterianae O. schlechteri 48 HHKK Indonesia (Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea O. schlechteri 48 HHKK Indonesia (Irian Jaya), Papua New Guinea
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So, What is the Problem? No problem really, but We would like to have a better tool to understand the interrelationships of various cultivars Which in turn should help breeders and genecists
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Well then, what is the plan? We chose four important enzymes, viz MaturaseIntegrase Alcohol dehydrogenase I and Alcohol dehydrogenase II
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Then, We got the protein sequence data [from NCBI]for these enzymes for 8 cultivars O. sativa 24 AA Worldwide O. sativa 24 AA Worldwide Ser. Latifoliae O. eichingeri 24 CC South Asia, East Africa O. eichingeri 24 CC South Asia, East Africa O. alta 48 CCDD South, Central America O. alta 48 CCDD South, Central America O. grandiglumis 48 CCDD South, C. America O. grandiglumis 48 CCDD South, C. America O. latifolia 48 CCDD South, C.America O. latifolia 48 CCDD South, C.America O. minuta 48 BBCC Philippines, PN G O. minuta 48 BBCC Philippines, PN G O. punctata 24, 48 BB, BBCC Sub-Saharan Africa O. punctata 24, 48 BB, BBCC Sub-Saharan Africa O. rhizomatis 24 CC Sri Lanka O. rhizomatis 24 CC Sri Lanka
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Hold On Change of Speaker
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Methods [contd.] We constructed a phylogenetic tree for each enzyme using Workbench using Clustalw We calculated the distance matrix from this tree using ClustalDist
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[Methods-contd.] We converted the distance matrix to digital form to be used in JBenzer and GDE using PERL scripts. Threshold We used a median point between the distance values as a threshold. We will discuss the implications of changing the threshold after presenting the results
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Finally [methods contd.] We combined all the distance matrices and combined in to one matrix and Digitized the matrix for use in JBenzer and GDE to obtain a single Benzer plot
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clustalw clustdistclustdist2benzer.pl benzer2gde.pl Biology Workbench sequences
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Clustdist2benzer.pl OL (1) 0.000 0.002 0.002 0.008 0.006 0.013 0.015 0.015 OG (2) 0.002 0.000 0.000 0.006 0.004 0.012 0.013 0.013 OA (3) 0.002 0.000 0.000 0.006 0.004 0.012 0.013 0.013 OE (4) 0.008 0.006 0.006 0.000 0.002 0.013 0.015 0.015 OR (5) 0.006 0.004 0.004 0.002 0.000 0.012 0.013 0.013 OS (6) 0.013 0.012 0.012 0.013 0.012 0.000 0.015 0.015 OP (7) 0.015 0.013 0.013 0.015 0.013 0.015 0.000 0.000 OM (8) 0.015 0.013 0.013 0.015 0.013 0.015 0.000 0.000 JBENZER 8 1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,OL 1,1,1,0,1,0,0,0,OG 1,1,1,0,1,0,0,0,OA 0,0,0,1,1,0,0,0,OE 0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,OR 0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,OS 0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1,OP 0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1,OM
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Benzer2gde.pl JBENZER 8 1,1,1,0,0,0,0,0,OL 1,1,1,0,1,0,0,0,OG 1,1,1,0,1,0,0,0,OA 0,0,0,1,1,0,0,0,OE 0,1,1,1,1,0,0,0,OR 0,0,0,0,0,1,0,0,OS 0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1,OP 0,0,0,0,0,0,1,1,OM "OL","OG" "OL","OA" "OG","OL" "OG","OA" "OG","OR" "OA","OL" "OA","OG" "OA","OR" "OE","OR" "OR","OG" "OR","OA" "OR","OE" "OS","OS" "OP","OM" "OM","OP"
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Maturase OL OG OA OE OR OS OP OM
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Integrase OA OG OL OS OP OE OR OM
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Alcohol dehydrogenase I OP OA OG OS OE OR OL OM
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Alcohol dehydrogenase II OL OG OA OM OP OS OE OR
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Combined Matrix
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Back to the Beginning
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Conclusions The phylogenetic trees and JBenzer differ in some respects JBenjer plots show O.sativa [2n=24,AA]to be unique but in phylogenic trees,it is clustered with O.punctata [4x,48,BBCC] or O.grandiglumis and O.alta[4x,48,CCDD]
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BUT Remember the threshold values? We used a median value from a matrix table and it does give relationships which can be related to their genomes. IF we change the threshold value, the Benjer plot will change which brings the question whether relationships based on distance matrices need re-visitation
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We realize that phylogenetic trees based on distance matrices have been used for so long However, different scientists calculate and interpret the distance matrix results differently Does it help if the input data is obtained differently from the beginning in binary format
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We used a very limited data to compare but it does indicate that we may have to look at the phylogenetic relationships using improved methods to minimize and /or to understand better varied interpretations
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Finally A Gigabyte of Thanks to ALL THE BIOQUEST STAFF AND THE PARTICIPANTS OF THIS WORKSHOP WHO MADE OUR PARTICIPATION IN THE WORKSHOP A MEMORABLE AND REWARDING EXPERIENCE
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