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Pinpointing Uncertainty. Comparing competing phylogenetic hypotheses - tests of two (or more) trees. Particularly useful techniques are those designed to allow evaluation of alternative phylogenetic hypotheses
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Comparing competing phylogenetic hypotheses- tests of two (or more) trees • Particularly useful techniques are those designed to allow evaluation of alternative phylogenetic hypotheses • Several such tests allow us to determine if one tree is statistically significantly worse than another: • Winning sites, Templeton, Kishino-Hasegawa, parametric bootstrapping (SOWH) • Shimodaira-Hasegawa, Approximately Unbiased
Tests of two trees • Tests are of the null hypothesis that the differences between two trees (A and B) are no greater than expected from sampling error • The simplest ‘wining sites’ test sums the number of sites supporting tree A over tree B and vice versa (those having fewer steps on, and better fit to, one of the trees) • Under the null hypothesis characters are equally likely to support tree A or tree B and a binomial distribution gives the probability of the observed difference in numbers of winning sites
The Templeton test • Templeton’s test is a non-parametric Wilcoxon signed ranks test of the differences in fits of characters to two trees • It is like the ‘winning sites’ test but also takes into account the magnitudes of differences in the support of characters for the two trees
Templeton’s test - an example Recent studies of the relationships of turtles using morphological data have produced very different results with turtles grouping either within the parareptiles (H1) or within the diapsids (H2) the result depending on the morphologist This suggests there may be: - problems with the data - special problems with turtles - weak support for turtle relationships 1 Archosauromorpha Lepidosauriformes Diadectomorpha Eosauropterygia Younginiformes Seymouriadae Claudiosaurus Captorhinidae Araeoscelidia Paleothyris Parareptilia Synapsida Placodus 2 Parsimony analysis of the most recent data favoured H2 However, analyses constrained by H2 produced trees that required only 3 extra steps (<1% tree length) The Templeton test was used to evaluate the trees and showed that the slightly longer H1 tree found in the constrained analyses was not significantly worse than the unconstrained H2 tree The morphological data do not allow choice between H1 and H2
Kishino-Hasegawa test • The Kishino-Hasegawa test is similar in using differences in the support provided by individual sites for two trees to determine if the overall differences between the trees are significantly greater than expected from random sampling error • It is a parametric test that depends on assumptions that the characters are independent and identically distributed (the same assumptions underlying the statistical interpretation of bootstrapping) • It can be used with parsimony and maximum likelihood - implemented in PHYLIP and PAUP*
Kishino-Hasegawa test If the difference between trees (tree lengths or likelihoods) is attributable to sampling error, then characters will randomly support tree A or B and the total difference will be close to zero The observed difference is significantly greater than zero if it is greater than 1.95 standard deviations This allows us to reject the null hypothesis and declare the sub-optimal tree significantly worse than the optimal tree (p < 0.05) Sites favouring tree A Sites favouring tree B Expected Mean 0 Distribution of Step/Likelihood differences at each site Under the null hypothesis the mean of the differences in parsimony steps or likelihoods for each site is expected to be zero, and the distribution normal From observed differences we calculate a standard deviation
Kishino-Hasegawa test Ciliate SSUrDNA Ochromonas Symbiodinium Prorocentrum Sarcocystis Theileria Plagiopyla n Parsimonious character optimization of the presence and absence of hydrogenosomes suggests four separate origins of within the ciliates Plagiopyla f Trimyema c Trimyema s Cyclidium p Cyclidium g Cyclidium l Glaucoma Colpodinium Tetrahymena Paramecium Discophrya Trithigmostoma Opisthonecta Colpoda Dasytrichia Questions - how reliable is this result? - in particular how well supported is the idea of multiple origins? - how many origins can we confidently infer? Entodinium Spathidium Loxophylum Homalozoon Metopus c Metopus p Stylonychia Onychodromous Oxytrichia Loxodes Tracheloraphis Spirostomum Gruberia Blepharisma anaerobic ciliates with hydrogenosomes Maximum likelihood tree
Kishino-Hasegawa test Parsimony analyse with topological constraints found the shortest trees forcing hydrogenosomal ciliate lineages together, thereby reducing the number of separate origins of hydrogenosomes Ochromonas Ochromonas Symbiodinium Symbiodinium Prorocentrum Prorocentrum Sarcocystis Sarcocystis Theileria Theileria Plagiopyla n Plagiopyla n Plagiopyla f Plagiopyla f Trimyema c Trimyema c Trimyema s Trimyema s Cyclidium p Cyclidium p Cyclidium g Metopus c Cyclidium l Metopus p Dasytrichia Dasytrichia Entodinium Entodinium Loxophylum Cyclidium g Homalozoon Cyclidium l Spathidium Loxophylum Metopusc Spathidium Metopus p Homalozoon Loxodes Loxodes Each of the constrained parsimony trees were compared to the ML tree and the Kishino-Hasegawa test used to determine which of these trees were significantly worse than the ML tree Tracheloraphis Tracheloraphis Spirostomum Spirostomum Gruberia Gruberia Blepharisma Blepharisma Discophrya Discophrya Trithigmostoma Trithigmostoma Stylonychia Stylonychia Onychodromous Onychodromous Oxytrichia Oxytrichia Colpoda Colpoda Paramecium Paramecium Glaucoma Glaucoma Colpodinium Colpodinium Tetrahymena Tetrahymena Opisthonecta Opisthonecta Two topological constraint trees
Kishino-Hasegawa test Test summary and results (simplified) Constrained analyses used to find most parsimonious trees with less than four separate origins of hydrogenosomes Tested against ML tree Trees with 2 or 1 origin are all significantly worse than the ML tree We can confidently conclude that there have been at least three separate origins of hydrogenosomes within the sampled ciliates N o . C o n s t r a i n t E x t r a D i f f e r e n c e S i g n i f i c a n t l y O r i g i n s t r e e S t e p s a n d S D w o r s e ? 4 M L + 1 0 - - 4 M P - - 1 3 1 8 N o 3 ( c p , p t ) + 1 3 - 2 1 2 2 N o 3 ( c p , r c ) + 1 1 3 - 3 3 7 4 0 Y e s 3 ( c p , m ) + 4 7 - 1 4 7 3 6 Y e s 3 ( p t , r c ) + 9 6 - 2 7 9 3 8 Y e s 3 ( p t , m ) + 2 2 - 6 8 2 9 Y e s 3 ( r c , m ) + 6 3 - 1 9 0 3 4 Y e s 2 ( p t , c p , r c ) + 1 2 3 - 4 3 2 4 0 Y e s 2 ( p t , r c , m ) + 1 0 0 - 3 5 3 4 3 Y e s 2 ( p t , c p , m ) + 4 0 - 1 4 0 3 7 Y e s 2 ( c p , r c , m ) + 1 2 4 - 4 6 6 4 9 Y e s 2 ( p t , c p ) ( r c , m ) + 7 7 - 2 2 2 3 9 Y e s 2 ( p t , m ) ( r c , c p ) + 1 3 1 - 4 4 2 4 8 Y e s 2 ( p t , r c ) ( c p , m ) + 1 4 0 - 4 1 4 5 0 Y e s 1 ( p t , c p , m , r c ) + 1 3 1 - 5 1 5 4 9 Y e s
Problems with tests of trees • To be statistically valid, the Kishino-Hasegawa test should be of trees that are selected a priori • However, most applications have used trees selected a posteriori on the basis of the phylogenetic analysis • Where we test the ‘best’ tree against some other tree the KH test will be biased towards rejection of the null hypothesis • Only if null hypothesis is not rejected will result be safe from some unknown level of bias
Problems with tests of trees • The Shimodaira-Hasegawa test is a more statistically correct technique for testing trees selected a posteriori and is implemented in PAUP* • However it requires selection of a set of plausible topologies - hard to give practical advice • Parametric bootstrapping (SOWH test) is an alternative - but it is harder to implement and may suffer from an opposite bias due to model mis-specification • The Approximately Unbiased test (implemented in CONSEL) may be the best option currently
Taxonomic Congruence • Trees inferred from different data sets (different genes, morphology) should agree if they are accurate • Congruence between trees is best explained by their accuracy • Congruence can be investigated using consensus (and supertree) methods • Incongruence requires further work to explain or resolve disagreements
Reliability of Phylogenetic Methods • Phylogenetic methods (e.g. parsimony, distance, ML) can also be evaluated in terms of their general performance, particularly their: consistency - approach the truth with more data efficiency - how quickly (how much data) robustness - sensitivity to violations of assumptions • Studies of these properties can be analytical or by simulation
Reliability of Phylogenetic Methods • There have been many arguments that ML methods are best because they have desirable statistical properties, such as consistency • However, ML does not always have these properties • if the model is wrong/inadequate (fortunately this is testable to some extent) • properties not yet demonstrated for complex inference problems such as phylogenetic trees
Reliability of Phylogenetic Methods • “Simulations show that ML methods generally outperform distance and parsimony methods over a broad range of realistic conditions” Whelan et al. 2001 Trends in Genetics 17:262-272 • But… • Most simulations cover a narrow range of very (unrealistically) simple conditions • few taxa (typically just four!) • few parameters (standard models - JC, K2P etc)
Reliability of Phylogenetic Methods • Simulations with four taxa have shown: • Model based methods - distance and maximum likelihood perform well when the model is accurate (not surprising!) • Violations of assumptions can lead to inconsistency for all methods (a Felsenstein zone) when branch lengths or rates are highly unequal • Maximum likelihood methods are quite robust to violations of model assumptions • Weighting can improve the performance of parsimony (reduce the size of the Felsenstein zone)
Reliability of Phylogenetic Methods • However: • Generalising from four taxon simulations may be dangerous as conclusions may not hold for more complex cases • A few large scale simulations (many taxa) have suggested that parsimony can be very accurate and efficient • Most methods are accurate in correctly recovering known phylogenies produced in laboratory studies • More realistic simulations are needed if they are to help in choosing/understanding methods • You can try your own…