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Substitutional bias confounds inference of cyanelle origins from sequence data
Authors:P. J. Lockhart  C. J. Howe  D. A. Bryant  T. J. Beanland  A. W. D. Larkum
Affiliation:(1) Department of Biological Sciences, University of Sydney, Macleay Building A12, 2006 NSW, Australia;(2) Department of Biochemistry, University of Cambridge, Tennis Court Rd, CB2 1QW Cambridge, UK;(3) Department of Molecular and Cell Biology, Pennsylvania State University, 16802 University Park, PA, USA
Abstract:Summary Available molecular and biochemical data offer conflicting evidence for the origin of the cyanelle of Cyanophora paradoxa. We show that the similarity of cyanelle and green chloroplast sequences is probably a result of these two lineages independently developing the same pattern of directional nucleotide change (substitutional bias). This finding suggests caution should be exercised in the interpretation of nucleotide sequence analyses that appear to favor the view of a common endosymbiont for the cyanelle and chlorophyll-b-containing chloroplasts. The data and approaches needed to resolve the issue of cyanelle origins are discussed. Our findings also have general implications for phylogenetic inference under conditions where the base compositions (compositional bias) of the sequences analyzed differ.Offprint requests to: C.J. Howe
Keywords:Phylogenetic inference  Stationarity  Substitutional Bias  Compositional bias  Cyanelle  Cyanophora paradoxa
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