PhyloNet: A Software Package for Analyzing and Reconstructing Reticulate Evolutionary Relationships
Phylogenies, i.e., the evolutionary histories of groups of taxa, playa major role in representing the interrelationships among biological entities. Many software tools for reconstructing and evaluating such phylogenies have been proposed, almost all of which assume the underlying evolutionary history to be a tree.
While trees give a satisfactory first-order approximation for many families of organisms, other families exhibit evolutionary mechanisms that cannot be represented by trees. Processes such as horizontal gene transfer (HGT),hybrid speciation, and interspecific recombination, collectively referred to as reticulate evolutionary events, result in networks, rather than trees, of relationships.
Various software tools have been recently developed to analyze reticulate evolutionary relationships, which includeSplitsTree4,LatTrans, EEEP, HorizStory, and T-REX.
Results: In this paper, we report on the PhyloNet software package, which is a suite of tools for analyzing reticulate evolutionary relationships, or evolutionary networks,which are rooted, directed, acyclic graphs, leaf-labeled by a set of taxa.
These tools can be classified into four categories:(1) evolutionary network representation: reading/writing evolutionary networks in a newly devisedcompact form;(2) evolutionary network characterization: analyzing evolutionary networks in terms of three basicbuilding blocks---trees, clusters, and tripartitions;(3) evolutionary network comparison: comparing two evolutionary networks in terms of topological dissimilarities, as well as fitness to sequence evolution under a maximum parsimony criterion; and(4) evolutionary network reconstruction: reconstructing an evolutionary network from a species tree and a set of gene trees.
Conclusions: The software package, PhyloNet, offers an array of utilities to allow for efficient and accurate analysis of evolutionary networks.
The software package will help significantly in analyzing large data sets, as well as in studying the performance of evolutionary network reconstruction methods. Further, the software package supports the proposed eNewick format for compact representation of evolutionary networks, a feature that allows for efficient interoperability of evolutionary network software tools.
Currently, all utilities in PhyloNet are invoked on the command line.
Author: Cuong Than, Derek Ruths and Luay Nakhleh Credits/Source: BMC Bioinformatics 2008, 9:322
Published on: 2008-07-28
Limited copyright is granted for you to use and/or republish any story on this site for
any legitimate media purpose as long as you reference 7thSpace and any source mentioned in the story above. Please
make sure to read our disclaimer prior to contacting 7thSpace Interactive. To contact our editors, visit our online helpdesk. If you wish submit your own press release, click here.
Social Bookmarking
Digg this! | Post to del.icio.us | Post to Furl | Add to Netscape | Add to Yahoo! | Rojo
|
|