Comprehensive phylogeny of ray-finned fishes (Actinopterygii) based on transcriptomic and genomic data.
Lily C HughesGuillermo OrtíYu HuangYing SunCarole C BaldwinAndrew W ThompsonDahiana ArcilaRicardo Betancur-RChenhong LiLeandro A BeckerNicolas BelloraXiaomeng ZhaoXiaofeng LiMin WangChao FangBing XieZhuocheng ZhouHai HuangSonglin ChenByrappa VenkateshQiong ShiPublished in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2018)
Our understanding of phylogenetic relationships among bony fishes has been transformed by analysis of a small number of genes, but uncertainty remains around critical nodes. Genome-scale inferences so far have sampled a limited number of taxa and genes. Here we leveraged 144 genomes and 159 transcriptomes to investigate fish evolution with an unparalleled scale of data: >0.5 Mb from 1,105 orthologous exon sequences from 303 species, representing 66 out of 72 ray-finned fish orders. We apply phylogenetic tests designed to trace the effect of whole-genome duplication events on gene trees and find paralogy-free loci using a bioinformatics approach. Genome-wide data support the structure of the fish phylogeny, and hypothesis-testing procedures appropriate for phylogenomic datasets using explicit gene genealogy interrogation settle some long-standing uncertainties, such as the branching order at the base of the teleosts and among early euteleosts, and the sister lineage to the acanthomorph and percomorph radiations. Comprehensive fossil calibrations date the origin of all major fish lineages before the end of the Cretaceous.