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Conflict between Amino Acid and Nucleotide Characters
Author(s) -
Simmons Mark P.,
Ochoterena Helga,
Freudenstein John V.
Publication year - 2002
Publication title -
cladistics
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 2.323
H-Index - 92
eISSN - 1096-0031
pISSN - 0748-3007
DOI - 10.1111/j.1096-0031.2002.tb00148.x
Subject(s) - phylogenetic tree , amino acid , biology , nucleotide , clade , evolutionary biology , phylogenetics , genetics , genetic code , gene
Slowly evolving characters, such as amino acids and replacement substitutions, have generally been favored over faster evolving characters for inferring phylogenetic relationships. However, amino acids constitute composite characters and, because of the degenerate genetic code, are subject to convergence. Based on an analysis of atpB and rbcL in 567 seed plants, we show that silent substitutions may be more phylogenetically informative than replacement substitutions and that artifacts caused by composite characters and/or convergence cause clades on amino acid trees to conflict with nucleotide trees and independent evidence. These findings indicate that coding nucleotide sequences only as amino acid characters for phylogenetic analysis provides little benefit and may yield misleading results.

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