Improving Evolutionary Models for Mitochondrial Protein Data with Site-Class Specific Amino Acid Exchangeability Matrices
Date
2013-01
Authors
Dunn, Katherine A.
Jiang, Wenyi
Field, Christopher
Bielawski, Joseph P.
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Abstract
Adequate modeling of mitochondrial sequence evolution is an essential component of mitochondrial
phylogenomics (comparative mitogenomics). There is wide recognition within the field that
lineage-specific aspects of mitochondrial evolution should be accommodated through lineage-specific
amino-acid exchangeability matrices (e.g., mtMam for mammalian data). However, such a matrix must be
applied to all sites and this implies that all sites are subject to the same, or largely similar,
evolutionary constraints. This assumption is unjustified. Indeed, substantial differences are
expected to arise from three-dimensional structures that impose different physiochemical
environments on individual amino acid residues. The objectives of this paper are (1) to investigate
the extent to which amino acid evolution varies among sites of mitochondrial proteins, and (2) to
assess the potential benefits of explicitly modeling such variability. To achieve this, we developed
a novel method for partitioning sites based on amino acid physiochemical properties. We apply this
method to two datasets derived from complete mitochondrial genomes of mammals and fish, and use
maximum likelihood to estimate amino acid exchangeabilities for the different groups of sites. Using
this approach we identified large groups of sites evolving under unique physiochemical constraints.
Estimates of amino acid exchangeabilities differed significantly among such groups. Moreover, we
found that joint estimates of amino acid exchangeabilities do not adequately represent the natural
variability in evolutionary processes among sites of mitochondrial proteins. Significant
improvements in likelihood are obtained when the new matrices are employed. We also find that
maximum likelihood estimates of branch lengths can be strongly impacted. We provide sets of matrices
suitable for groups of sites subject to similar physiochemical constraints, and discuss how they
might be used to analyze real data. We also discuss how the general approach might be employed to
improve a variety of mitogenomic-based research activities.
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Citation
Dunn, Katherine A., Wenyi Jiang, Christopher Field, and Joseph P. Bielawski. 2013. "Improving Evolutionary Models for Mitochondrial Protein Data with Site-Class Specific Amino Acid
Exchangeability Matrices." Plos One 8(1): 55816-e55816.