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BMC Plant Biology logoLink to BMC Plant Biology
. 2019 Dec 5;19:543. doi: 10.1186/s12870-019-2147-6

Plastome phylogenomics, biogeography, and clade diversification of Paris (Melanthiaceae)

Yunheng Ji 1,2,✉,#, Lifang Yang 1, Mark W Chase 3, Changkun Liu 1, Zhenyan Yang 1, Jin Yang 1, Jun-Bo Yang 4,#, Ting-Shuang Yi 4,#
PMCID: PMC6896732  PMID: 31805856

Abstract

Background

Paris (Melanthiaceae) is an economically important but taxonomically difficult genus, which is unique in angiosperms because some species have extremely large nuclear genomes. Phylogenetic relationships within Paris have long been controversial. Based on complete plastomes and nuclear ribosomal DNA (nrDNA) sequences, this study aims to reconstruct a robust phylogenetic tree and explore historical biogeography and clade diversification in the genus.

Results

All 29 species currently recognized in Paris were sampled. Whole plastomes and nrDNA sequences were generated by the genome skimming approach. Phylogenetic relationships were reconstructed using the maximum likelihood and Bayesian inference methods. Based on the phylogenetic framework and molecular dating, biogeographic scenarios and historical diversification of Paris were explored. Significant conflicts between plastid and nuclear datasets were identified, and the plastome tree is highly congruent with past interpretations of the morphology. Ancestral area reconstruction indicated that Paris may have originated in northeastern Asia and northern China, and has experienced multiple dispersal and vicariance events during its diversification. The rate of clade diversification has sharply accelerated since the Miocene/Pliocene boundary.

Conclusions

Our results provide important insights for clarifying some of the long-standing taxonomic debates in Paris. Cytonuclear discordance may have been caused by ancient and recent hybridizations in the genus. The climatic and geological changes since the late Miocene, such as the intensification of Asian monsoon and the rapid uplift of Qinghai-Tibet Plateau, as well as the climatic fluctuations during the Pleistocene, played essential roles in driving range expansion and radiative diversification in Paris. Our findings challenge the theoretical prediction that large genome sizes may limit speciation.

Keywords: Plastid phylogenomics, Biogeography, Radiative diversification, Cytonuclear discordance, Large genome size, Parideae, Paris, Melanthiaceae, Trilliaceae

Background

Paris is a small genus that was once placed in Trilliaceae [1], but now in Melanthiaceae [26]. The genus comprises of ca. 29 species of understory perennial herbs that are continuously distributed across Eurasia [79]. With most species (24/29) occurring in China and Himalayas, Paris may have experienced significant species diversification in subtropical East Asia (21°–34° N) [7, 9, 10]. Most species of this genus are much-valued traditional medicinal herbs in China and neighboring counties due to their various therapeutic properties [1113]. Among them, the rhizomes of Paris polyphylla var. chinensis and P. polyphylla var. yunnanensis (Rhizome Paridis) have been used as traditional medicine for more than 2000 years in China [14]. To date, more than 40 commercial drugs and health products have been developed using Rhizome Paridis as raw materials [15], with ~ 1.5 billion USD per year in gross sales [16]. In addition, nearly all species with thick rhizomes are collected for medicinal purposes in Vietnam, Myanmar, Nepal, Bhutan, and India [13, 14].

Paris is morphologically distinctive in their single whorl of leaves (> 3) and solitary apical flower that is 4–15-merous. However, the rhizome, leaf, flower, stamens, ovary, fruit and seeds, which have been widely used to construct classifications, are highly divergent among species [7, 17]. Since the establishment of the genus by Linneaus [18], it has been subject to numerous critical revisions. Based on rhizome and fruit morphology, Franchet [19], who established the first infrageneric classification system of Paris, placed the species known at that time into two sections: Euthyra and Paris. Hara [17] described a third section, Kinugasa. Instead, Takhatajan [20] recognized these three sections as genera: Paris s. s. (= sect. Paris), Daiswa (= sect. Euthyra), and Kinugasa (= sect. Kinugasa). In the most comprehensive revision, Li [7] divided the genus into two subgenera, Daiswa and Paris, and eight sections, Axiparis, Dunnianae, Euthyra, Fargesianae, Kinugasa, Marmoratae, Paris, and Thibeticae. Based on molecular and morphological evidence, Ji et al. [21] suggested an updated classification of Li [7] by combining sections Dunnianae, Fargesianae and Marmoratae with Euthyra.

Several recent studies attempted to reconstruct phylogenetic relationships within Paris based on single or multiple DNA loci [2124]. Due to insufficient sequence variation or limited taxon sampling, these studies did not provide satisfactory resolution or support for infrageneric relationships. As such, the absence of a solid phylogenetic scheme hinders the satisfactory resolution of the long-standing disagreements over classification of Paris and limits our understanding of the evolutionary and biogeographic history of this economically important genus.

Plant phylogenetics based on limited sequence regions often suffer from poor resolution and low support, particularly for clades in which rapid diversification or hybridization events have occurred [2529]. Recently, next-generation sequencing, a technique capable of producing orders of magnitude more data than Sanger sequencing, has been increasingly used for phylogenetic reconstruction [3035]. This has offered new approaches to resolve recalcitrant relationships in phylogenetically difficult taxa [3643]. Huang et al. [44] and Yang et al. [45] attempted to apply plastid genomes (plastomes) to resolve phylogenetic relationships within Paris. Although the plastome data greatly improve phylogenetic resolution and support, limited taxon sampling prevented them from building a robust overall view of the genus. It is, therefore, necessary to extend sampling size to cover all described sections and even all species, and to use markers with different inheritance patterns to comprehensively understand the evolutionary history of Paris.

The biparentally inherited but generally uniparental evolution via gene conversion of nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences (nrDNA) and the non-recombining, mostly maternally inherited plastomes contain a large number of evolutionarily informative variation suitable for phylogenetic analysis [4650]. Genome skimming via shotgun sequencing of total genomic DNA at relatively low coverage is an efficient approach to recover entire plastomes and nrDNA [47]. Recently, genome skimming has been widely employed to reconstruct the evolutionary relationship at lower taxonomic levels and among closely related species [5155], as well as to investigate reticulate evolution in diverse plant clades [52, 5658]. In this study, we generated plastome and nrDNA sequences from all currently recognized Paris species using genome skimming method. Based on phylogenomic analyses, we aimed to (1) clarify evolutionary relationships within Paris; and (2) explore biogeographic scenarios and historical diversification for the genus.

Results

Illumina sequencing and assembly

Low coverage genome sequencing generated per sample 8.57–35.73 million paired-end clean reads (150 bp) (Additional file 1: Table S1). Of these, 7.25 × 104 to 2.10 × 106 and 4.81 × 103 to 4.59 × 104 were mapped to the reference plastome and nuclear nrDNA, respectively. Based on these data, we assembled complete plastomes and nrDNA for all samples, with the average sequencing depth ranging from 68.72–1998.57 times and 75.15–1136.47 times, respectively.

The de novo assembly produced 33 Paris plastomes, which exhibited a typical quadripartite structure, with the size varying from 156,139–158,643 bp (Additional file 2: Figure S1). Paris plastomes are conserved in gene content and arrangement. All plastomes contain 114 genes, including 80 protein-coding genes, 30 tRNA genes, and four plastid rRNA genes (Additional file 3: Table S2). Alignment of the plastomes yielded a matrix of 166,726 positions, in which we identified 5899 variable sites (3.53%) and 3225 (1.93%) were parsimony informative (Table 1). Also, our de novo nrDNA assembly entirely covered 18S, ITS1, 5.8S, ITS2 and 26S regions. The sequence length of Paris nrDNA ranged from 5840 to 5859 bp. Alignment of the nrDNA sequences produced 443 variable sites (7.56%), of which 264 (4.50%) were parsimony informative (Table 1).

Table 1.

Comparison of sequence characteristics of the aligned plastome and nrDNA datasets in Paris

Dataset Aligned length (bp) Variable sites (divergence) Parsimony informative sites (divergence)
Complete plastome 166,726 5899 (3.53%) 3225 (1.93%)
nrDNA 5862 443 (7.56%) 264 (4.50%)

Phylogenetic relationships

The standard maximum likelihood (ML) and Bayesian inference (BI) analyses of complete plastomes generated identical tree topologies (Fig. 1). Five highly supported clades (bootstrap percentage, BP = 100; posterior probability, PP = 1.00) within Melanthiaceae were resolved, which correspond to the five tribes recognized by Zomlefer [3]. Their relationships are congruent with those of previous studies [3, 5, 6, 44, 59]. The monophyly of Paris was strongly supported (BP = 100, PP = 1.00), which was sister to Trillium (BP = 100, PP = 1.00). Within Paris, five well-supported clades corresponding to the five sections circumscribed by Ji et al. [21] were recovered. Our results support the successive divergence of the P. sections Paris, Kinugasa, Thibeticae, Axiparis and Euthyra. Most relationships obtained high support except a few terminal species relationships. For instance, the relationship between P. luquanensis and P. marmorata received weak branch support (BP = 57, PP = 0.67) in both ML and BI trees.

Fig. 1.

Fig. 1

Phylogenetic relationships and ancestral areas reconstruction of Paris. (I) Phylogenetic tree based on plastome DNA sequences. Numbers above branches indicate maximum likelihood bootstrap percentages (BP) and Bayesian posterior probabilities (PP). (II) Reconstruction of ancestral area of Paris using S-DIVA analysis inferred from plastid tree. (III) Paris species assigned to four areas based on their current distributions: A. southwestern China and Himalayas, B. eastern, central, southern China and northern Indochina, C. northeastern Asia and northern China, D. Europe and Caucasus

The incongruence length difference (ILD) test revealed significant discordance (p < 0.001) between the nrDNA and plastome datasets. The phylogenetic analysis of nrDNA sequences (Fig. 2) divided tribe Paridae (Paris and Trillium) species into two clades (BP = 100, PP = 1.00). Within the first clade (BP = 70, PP = 0.50), section Paris is sister to Trillium (BP = 59, PP = 0.60) and this pair is sister to section Kinugasa. Within the second clade (BP = 100, PP = 1.00), section Thibeticae is sister to all species of sections Axiparis and Euthyra, which are non-monophyletic. In comparing nuclear and plastid topologies, we observed three instances of cytonuclear discordance at different taxonomic levels (Fig. 2). The first is the non-monophyly of Paris in the nuclear dataset. The second is monophyly of sections Axiparis and Euthyra: they are paraphyletic in nrDNA tree but monophyletic in the plastid tree. The third instance of cytonuclear discordance concerns the interspecific relationships within section Euthyra (Fig. 2).

Fig. 2.

Fig. 2

Comparison of tree topologies recovered from analyses of nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences (I) and plastome DNA sequences (II). Numbers above branches indicated maximum likelihood bootstrap percentages (BP) and Bayesian posterior probabilities (PP)

Ancestral area reconstruction, molecular dating, and historical diversification

The Statistical-Dispersal Vicariance Analysis (S-DIVA) (Fig. 1) reconstructed northeastern Asia and northern China (C) as the ancestral area for the most recent common ancestor (MRCA) of Paris. It may have undergone a westward or southward dispersal into southwestern China and Himalayas or eastern, central, southern China and northern Indochina [AC (0.50/BC (0.50)] to evolve the MRCA of thick rhizome clade. Then, a vicariance was inferred to split section Kinugasa (Japanese Islands) from remaining taxa (sections Thibeticae, Axiparis, and Euthyra, subtropical East Asia); within the latter, three dispersal and two vicariance events were inferred. Although the S-DIVA analysis failed to reconstruct the ancestral area of the section Paris, a dispersal, an extinction, and two vicariance events were inferred in the clade.

The BEAST analyses (Fig. 3) indicated that the divergence between the sister genera, Paris and Trillium, occurred at 33.94 Mya (95% HPD: 37.84–29.70 Mya). Within Paris, the thick and slender rhizome clades diverged from their MRCA at 28.66 Mya (95% HPD: 35.17–20.62 Mya), around the early Oligocene. Diversification within the thick rhizome clade commenced 16.00 Mya (95% HPD: 22.39–7.04 Mya), around the early Miocene, leading to the divergence of the monotypic section Kinugasa from the remaining thick-rhizome taxa. Subsequently, the monotypic section Thibeticae diverged from the MRCA of sections Axparis and Euthyra at 10.08 Mya (95% HPD: 13.51–7.46 Mya), in late Miocene. The split of sections Axparis and Euthyra was dated at 7.07 Mya (95% HPD: 9.38–5.12 Mya), around the Miocene/Pliocene boundary. Additionally, the diversification of sections Paris, Axiparis, and Euthyra occurred at 10.93 Mya (95% HPD: 21.14–5.65 Mya), 4.77 Mya (95% HPD: 6.75–2.91 Mya), and 4.59 Mya (95% HPD: 6.27–3.12 Mya), respectively.

Fig. 3.

Fig. 3

Divergence time estimation based on plastome DNA sequences. Numbers above/under the tree branches represented mean divergent ages and 95% confidence interval of each node. Red arrows indicate the calibration points for the molecular dating. Divergence time and the timeline are indicated in million years (Mya)

The semi-logarithmic lineage through time (LTT) plots analysis (Fig. 4) suggested that the origin of Paris was followed by a relatively stable diversification rate, which, however, sharply increased around Miocene/Pliocene boundary. This upward trend was maintained during the Pliocene and the Pleistocene. The Bayesian Analysis of Macroevolutionary Mixtures (BAMM) detected a rate shift in net species diversification in Paris, which occurred with the divergence between sect. Euthyra and Axiparis (Fig. 4).

Fig. 4.

Fig. 4

(I) Result of lineage through time (LTT) plots (A) analyses. Mya = million years ago. (II) Rate shift with the highest posterior probability inferred in Bayesian Analysis of Macroevolutionary Mixtures (BAMM) on the time-calibrated maximum clade credibility tree from BEAST. A shift is predicted and shown with green circle. Colors on the branch represent the mean of the posterior density of net diversification rate (speciation rate minus extinction rate)

Discussion

Phylogenetic inferences and taxonomic implications

Previous phylogenetic analyses based on a small number of DNA loci or limited taxon sampling failed to robustly reconstruct the backbone of the Paris tree [2124, 44, 45]. Including all currently recognized species, the plastome analysis fully resolved interspecific relationships of Paris with strong support at most nodes. Our study further confirms that phylogenetic analysis based on more DNA loci with greatly increased number of phylogenetically informative characters can significantly improve resolution at low taxonomic levels [36, 43, 52, 53, 60].

The plastome-based phylogenies strongly support the monophyly of Paris and recovered five strongly supported major clades that correspond to the previously proposed sections by Ji et al. [21]. Within Paris, successive divergence along the spine of the tree of sections Paris, Kinugasa, Axiparis, Thibeticae, Axiparis, and Euthyra was inferred. This divergence pattern can be supported by some morphological characters (Fig. 5). Briefly, the slender rhizome and round more berry-like fruit distinguish section Paris from the rest of the sections. Nevertheless, seeds without an enveloping sarcotesta (or aril, presumably a plesiomorphic character) separate sections Paris and Kinugasa from the rest. Although species of the thick rhizome clade (including sections Kinugasa, Thibeticae, Axiparis, and Euthyra) commonly have angular fruits, section Kinugasa is distinctive among these in possessing showy white sepals. The third diverging section Thibetica is similar to Euthyra in having dehiscent capsules, but its seed morphology (with an incomplete aril) is analogous to that of Axiparis. Therefore, the plastid tree is highly congruent with the morphologically based classification of Ji et al. [21].

Fig. 5.

Fig. 5

Comparison of morphological features among five Paris sections and Trillium

The plastid tree provides valuable insights for resolving the long-standing disagreements in classification of Paris. All Paris species share the morphological synapomorphies of flowers and leaves being 4–15-merous compared with the trimerous condition of Trillium (Fig. 5), and monophyly of both genera was fully supported, making it reasonable to recognize Paris as a single genus [7, 17, 21] rather than dividing it into three genera (Daiswa, Kinugasa, and Paris s. s.) [20]. Also, the new tree further supports the taxonomic treatment of Ji et al. [21] by combining sections Dunnianae, Fargesianae and Marmoratae with Euthyra. Given its economic importance, resolution of the long-standing taxonomic disputes will be conducive to exploration and protection of Paris species.

The current taxonomy of P. polyphylla with five varieties is not supported by either the plastid or nrDNA results. The varieties should be probably recognized as distinct species, but it is also likely, given the cytonuclear discordance observed for these accessions (Fig. 2) that hybridization may be involved in their origins. Further study of this group with more appropriate population genetic and cytological techniques is warranted.

Cytonuclear discordance

Similar to the previous study of Ji et al. [21], we detected discordance between the nrDNA and plastid trees for Paris at both deep and shallow nodes. Cytonuclear incongruence is a fairly common phenomenon in plant phylogenetics [25, 56, 6168]. In most cases, the nuclear tree is more congruent with morphological taxonomy [43, 56, 61, 62, 64, 6770], and such incongruence can be mainly attributed to incomplete sorting of cytoplasmic polymorphisms or introgression of the cytoplasmic genome from one species into the nuclear background of another by hybridization [25, 63, 68, 71, 72]. However, in our study the plastid tree of Paris is largely consistent with morphological evidence, suggesting nrDNA introgression without cytoplasmic gene flow could be responsible for the discordance detected [68, 7174].

Given that the discordance observed in Paris was likely due to phenomena affecting the nrDNA tree, which involved rapid gene conversion of one parental copy [7580], the phylogenetic relationships recovered by this dataset may not be representative of that obtained with other parts of the nuclear genome not subject to gene conversion. Nonetheless, these results may provide useful information about past hybridization events that otherwise may not be the majority pattern in the nuclear genome. Failure to recover Paris as a monophyletic in the nrDNA tree (Fig. 2) suggests there could have been hybridization between section Paris and Trillium after section Paris split form the rest of the genus. It is noteworthy that the largest eukaryotic genome, that P. japonica [81, 82], was supposed to be an allo-octaploid between Paris and Trillium according to previous cytological investigations [83]. This hybrid hypothesis is supported by its position as sister to section Paris and Trillium in the nrDNA tree. Likewise, the non-monophyly of sections Axiparis and Euthyra observed in the nrDNA tree (Fig. 2) can also be attributed to ancient hybridization. The sister relationship of P. luquanensis/P. mairei (section Euthyra) and the clade of four species of section Axiparis (P. dulongensis, P. forrestii, P. rugosa and P. tengchongensis) suggest that hybridization could have occurred between the ancestors of these taxa. Additionally, extensive discordance among species of section Euthyra (Fig. 2) supports the conclusions of the previous study that natural hybridization between species of section Euthyra is likely if the pollinators are the same, but little is known about this aspect of the biology of Paris. Experimental manual outcrossing has been effective between most of these species [84]. Interspecific hybridization is the likely cause of the cytonuclear discordance observed between species in the section. Additionally, as mentioned above, there is discordance for the positions of the varieties of P. polyphylla, suggesting that hybridization may also have played a role in their origins.

It is notable that the cytonuclear discordance detected in this study merely reflects conflict between plastomes and nrDNA datasets, which are substantially two linkage groups of plastid and ribosomal genes and only represent at best two large single-locus DNA regions. Whether there is nuclear genome-wide and plastome discordance is a gigantic leap with such a limited dataset. To further verify this, large numbers of unlinked nuclear loci generated by restricted site-associated DNA sequencing (RAD-seq) or even whole nuclear genome sequencing are likely to be required.

Biogeography and lineage diversification

Because strong cytonuclear discordance was detected in Paris and the plastid tree agrees well with morphologically based classification, we address the biogeography and historical diversification of Paris based on the plastid dataset. The S-DIVA analysis recovered northeastern Asia and northern China as the ancestral area of Paris. Associated with a dispersal and a vicariance event (Fig. 1), the crown node of Paris was dated at 28.66 Mya (Fig. 3), in the early Oligocene, when the global climatic deterioration [85] led to the expansion of vegetation adapted to drier and colder climates in large parts of Eurasia [86]. Therefore, early divergence of Paris may have been driven by these events. Also, S-DIVA analysis revealed that the divergence of the Japanese endemic species, P. japonica and P. tetraphylla was triggered by two independent vicariance events (Fig. 1). Their divergence times of 16.00 Mya (P. japonica) and 10.93 Mya (P. tetraphylla), in the Miocene corresponds to the opening of the Japan Sea, which separated the Japan islands from the continental East Asia [87].

In the thick rhizome clade, the S-DIVA analysis inferred three dispersal events (Fig. 1), which were dated at 10.08, 7.07 and 4.59 Mya (Fig. 3), respectively. Neocene climatic change might play an essential role in triggering these events. The onset of the Asian monsoon around the Oligocene/Miocene transition created a connection between forests from low to high latitudes of East Asia [88]. The enhancement of Asian summer monsoon since the late Miocene established a humid climate in subtropical East Asia [8991], and caused a significant expansion of forests in East Asia [88, 92]. These climatic and environmental shifts would create favorable habitats that facilitated the dispersal and divergence of sections Thibeticae, Axiparis and Euthyra in subtropical East Asia. Also, along with the expansion of forests in high latitudes of East Asia, the MRCA of P. quadrifolia and P. incompleta may have migrated into Europe.

Both LTT and BAMM analyses revealed that clade diversification within Paris abruptly accelerated around the Miocene/Pliocene boundary, which could be driven by the further strengthening of monsoonal climate in the summer and the initiation of the two distinct monsoon regimes that have gradually become established in subtropical East Asia since the late Miocene [88, 92, 93]. From then on, eastern, central and southern China and northern Indochina have been primarily governed by Pacific monsoon, whereas southwestern China and the Himalayas have been mainly affected by Indian monsoon [9295]. The S-DIVA analysis (Fig. 1) and molecular dating (Fig. 3) showed that vicariance events occurred independently in sections Axiparis (4.77 Mya) and Euthyra (4.28 Mya) in the two regions mentioned above. This implies profound ecological heterogeneity resulting from climate differentiation may have driven significant allopatric speciation in the two regions [9698]. In addition, the LTT and BAMM analyses (Fig. 4) revealed that most extensive divergence in Paris, which was responsible for appearance of more than half of the extant taxa, took place in the Pliocene and the Pleistocene. It is believed that the Qinghai-Tibet Plateau (QTP) rose dramatically from the Late Miocene (ca. 10~8 Ma) to the early Pliocene (ca. 3.6 Ma) [99, 100], which dramatically modified global climate [94, 101] and thereby profoundly influenced biological processes, such as species range expansion/contraction and vicariance, in East Asia [102]. During the Pleistocene, there were at least four major glaciations in East Asia [103], and these probably created significant isolation and diverse habitats in East Asia [104, 105]. Such complex geological, ecological, and environmental heterogeneity is expected to have driven diversification of a wide spectrum of plant clade [104, 106109] and would also have triggered vicariance and facilitated a species radiative in Paris.

A negative correlation between genus-level diversity and the genus-average genome size was observed in plants [110, 111]. Knight et al. [111] proposed the large genome constraint hypothesis, which states that plant taxa with large size genomes diversify more slowly. Subsequently, Suda et al. [112] found that many island clades of Macaronesian angiosperms that underwent adaptive radiations have small genome sizes, and assumed that rapid diversification is more likely to happen in angiosperms with small genomes size. It is noteworthy that Paris is fairly distinctive in angiosperms in possessing large genomes. The minimum documented genome size in the genus (P. verticillata, 1C = 30.52 Gb) is much larger than the mean genome size (1C = 5.7 Gb) of angiosperms [113, 114]. Moreover, the known largest eukaryotic genome, that of P. japonica, 1 C = 148.88 Gb, belongs to Paris [81, 82]. In this study, we found that Paris may have undergone a species radiation since the Miocene/Pliocene boundary (Fig. 4), which is not consistent with prediction that large genome size could limit speciation [111, 112]. It also has to be admitted that although there is sharp rise in the lineage diversification, the total number of species involved is not large in comparison to other radiations, for instance, Dianthus in the Mediterannean [115], and Aizoaceae in South Africa [116]. The generality of the large genome constraint hypothesis needs to be further evaluated, although the increased lineage diversification detected here in Paris does not pose a major contradiction to it.

Conclusions

This study represents a comprehensive phylogenetic investigation of Paris, an economically important but taxonomically difficult genus, by sampling all currently recognized species in the genus. The analyses of complete plastome and nrDNA sequences reconstructed a robust phylogeny, and provided implications for clarifying some of the long-standing taxonomic debates in Paris. We also identified significant conflicts between plastid and nuclear datasets. This cytonuclear discordance observed in Paris may have been caused by ancient and recent hybridizations. Ancestral area reconstruction indicated that Paris may have originated in northeastern Asia and northern China, and has experienced multiple dispersal and vicariance events during its diversification. Based on phylogenetic framework and molecular dating, we propose that the climatic and geological changes since the Miocene played essential roles in triggering range formation and clade diversification in Paris. Our findings provide important insights for elucidating the evolutionary history of Paris, and will be conducive to exploration and protection of Paris species.

Methods

Plant sampling, DNA extraction and Illumina sequencing

We sampled 33 accessions to represent all 29 species and five varieties recognized by Li [7] and those described since then [9, 84, 117119]. The original sources of the plant materials used in this study and voucher information are presented in Additional file 4: Table S3. The voucher specimens were identified by Dr. Yunheng Ji. Genomic DNA was extracted from ca. 20 mg silica gel dried leaves using the CTAB (cetyltrimethylammonium bromide) method [120]. Approximately 5 μg of purified genomic DNA was sheared by sonication. Paired-end libraries with an average insert size 350 bp were prepared using a TruSeq DNA Sample Prep Kit (Illumina, Inc., USA) according to the manufacturer’s protocol. The libraries were paired-end sequenced on the Illumina HiSeq 2000 platform. Raw reads were filtered to remove adaptors and low quality reads using NGS QC Toolkit [121], by setting the cut-off value for percentage of read length to 80 and PHRED quality scores at 30.

Assembly and gene annotation

The complete plastome sequence of Paris quadrifolia (GenBank Accession: KM067394) was used as the reference for assembling the newly sequenced Paris plastomes. The plastid contigs were organized according to the references and connected with overlapping terminal sequences to yield the complete plastomes in Bowtie v2.2.6 [122] using the default parameters. Plastomes were annotated with the Dual Organellar Genome Annotator database [123]. Start and stop codons and intron/exon boundaries for protein-coding genes were checked manually. Annotated tRNA genes were further verified by tRNAscan-SE 1.21 [124] with the default parameters. The boundary of the large-single copy (LSC), small-single copy (SSC), and inverted-repeat (IR) regions for each plastome were visually examined and manually adjusted according to those of the reference plastome in Geneious V10.2 [125].

For nrDNA sequence assembly, we first excluded all plastid-like reads. Based on remaining reads, de novo assemblies were performed using the complete nrDNA sequence (including 26S, 18S and 5.8S ribosomal RNA genes and the internal transcribed spacers) of Lillium tsingtauense (GenBank Accession: KM117263) as reference. The external transcribed spacers in Paris species possesses too many repeat sequences and inversions that may make the assembly inaccurate, we therefore did not assemble the region. Contigs mapping to reference nrDNA were assembled using the processes described above. The nuclear ribosomal RNA genes and their boundaries with ITS regions were annotated and defined by comparison with the reference in Geneious V10.2 [125].

Phylogenetic analysis

To investigate phylogenetic placement of Paris within Melanthiaceae, 15 other plastomes representing the five tribes recognized in Melanthiaceae (Additional file 5: Table S4) were integrated with the 33 newly sequenced Paris plastomes in the final analysis. Furthermore, 33 Paris nrDNA and five rDNA sequences from Veratrum (1 accession), Ypsilandra (1 accession) and Trillium (3 accessions) of Melanthiaceae were incorporated into a nuclear dataset (Additional file 4: Table S3). Campynema lineare and Veratrum taliense were used to root the plastid and nuclear trees, respectively, according to previous studies [3, 5, 6, 59]. Alignment of plastid and nrDNA sequences were performed using MAFFT [126] integrated in Geneious v.10.2 [125], and manually edited if necessary. The most appropriated model of sequence substitution for plastomes (GTR + G) and nrDNA sequences (GTR + I + G) was selected using Modeltest v3.7 [127] with the Akaike information criterion [128]. We considered the whole plastome as a single inherited unit. Next, we confirmed the same model for both the small and large single copy regions and the inverted repeats using PartitionFinder v. 2.1.1 [129]. Conflict between plastid and nuclear datasets was examined using the incongruence length difference (ILD) test [130] implemented in PAUP* 4.0b10 [131] for 1000 replicates.

Phylogenetic analyses were carried out using both ML and BI methods. ML analyses were conducted using RAxML-HPC BlackBox v8.1.24 [132] with 1000 replicates of rapid bootstrapping. The BI analyses were performed using MRBAYES v.3.1.2 [133]. Runs for each dataset began with a random starting tree for one million generations with sampling at every 100 generations. An initial 25% of the sampled trees were discarded. The posterior probability values were determined from the remaining trees. Stationarity was considered to be reached when the average standard deviation of the split frequencies was < 0.01.

Molecular dating and diversification rate estimate

It is notable that no fossils have been identified for Melanthiaceae and its close relatives. A previous study that used 17 fossils across the monocots and major clades of angiosperms suggested that the crown age of Melanthiaceae was approximately 84.8 Mya, while the clades Parideae-Xerophyllideae and Chionographideae-Heloniadeae diverged approximately 74 Mya, and the tribes Parideae and Xerophyllideae split approximately 52.3 Mya [134]. We used these times to calibrate the phylogenetic tree (Fig. 3). Molecular dating was performed in BEAST v.2.4.7 [135]. The BEAST analyses were run under the uncorrelated lognormal relaxed clock approach with a Yule tree prior. Markov Chain Monte Carlo chains were run for 10,000,000 were run with sampling every 1000 generations. The stationarity of the chains and convergence of BEAST analyses was monitored by Tracer v. 1.5.

The diversification rate change over time was inferred using the semi-logarithmic lineage through time (LTT) plot approach. The consensus chronogram inferred from the results of molecular dating was computed by APE v.5.3 [136] within an R environment [137]. We further examined potential shifts in net diversification rate in Paris based on the time calibrated maximum clade credibility tree (with the highest posterior probability) from BEAST using the Bayesian Analysis of Macroevolutionary Mixtures (BAMM) [138].

Ancestral area reconstruction

For biogeographic reconstructions, Paris species were assigned to four areas based on their current distributions: A) southwestern China and Himalayas, B) eastern, central, southern China and northern Indochina, C) northeastern Asia and northern China, and D) Europe and the Caucasus. Ancestral distributions of Paris were reconstructed by statistical dispersal-vicariance analysis (S-DIVA) [139] implemented in RASP 4.0 [140]. The condensed tree and 4000 post burn-in Bayesian trees from BI analysis were used as input trees. The random tree was defined as 1000 and other parameters were set to their defaults.

Supplementary information

12870_2019_2147_MOESM1_ESM.docx (21.7KB, docx)

Additional file 1: Table S1. Summary of Illumina sequencing.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM2_ESM.jpg (2.1MB, jpg)

Additional file 2: Figure S1. Plastome map of Paris species.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM3_ESM.docx (18.8KB, docx)

Additional file 3: Table S2. Gene content of Paris plastomes.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM4_ESM.docx (19.7KB, docx)

Additional file 4: Table S3. Samples used in the study, with voucher and source information, and Genbank accessions.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM5_ESM.docx (15KB, docx)

Additional file 5: Table S4. Sequences downloaded from Genbank.

Acknowledgements

We thank Royal Botanic Garden (Edinburgh), Heng Li, Bing Liu, and Pascal Bruggeman for providing some materials in this study; Sirong Yi, Haicheng An, Qiliang Gan, Ren Zhao, Tingzhou Zhao, Chengjin Yang, Guohua Zhou, and Zhangming Wang for their help with field work.

Abbreviations

BI

Bayesian inference

bp

Base pair

BP

Bootstrap percentage

BS

Bootstrap

CTAB

Cetyl trimethylammonium bromide

DNA

Deoxyribonucleic acid

HPD

Highest posterior density

ILD

Incongruence length difference

IR

Inverted repeat

ITS

Internal transcribed spacer of nuclear ribosomal DNA

KUN

Herbarium of Kunming Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences

LSC

Large single-copy

LTT

Semi-logarithmic lineage through time

MCMC

Markov Chain Monte Carlo

ML

Maximum likelihood

MRCA

Most recent common ancestor

Mya

Million years ago

nrDNA

Nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences

PP

Posterior probability

QTP

Qinghai-Tibet Plateau

rRNA

Ribosomal RNA

S-DIVA

The statistical-dispersal vicariance analysis

SSC

Small single copy

tRNA

Transfer RNA

USD

United States dollar

Authors’ contributions

YJ, JBY, and TSY conceived the study; YJ, LY, and JBY collected the data; LY, CL, ZY, and JY analyzed the data; YJ wrote the manuscript; MWC and TSY discussed the results and revised the manuscript. All authors have read and approved the manuscript.

Funding

The authors would like to thank the financial support from the Major Program of National Natural Science Foundation of China (31590823), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (31872673), the NSFC-Joint Foundation of Yunnan Province (U1802287), a grant of the Large-scale Scientific Facilities of the Chinese Academy of Sciences (No. 2017-LSF-GBOWS-02), and, and the Major Science and Technology Projects of Yunnan Science and Technology Plan (2019ZF011–2) in design of the study, and collection, analysis and interpretation of data, as well as in writing the manuscript.

Availability of data and materials

The sequences generated in this study are available at GenBank (accession numbers are presented in Table S3). The manually adjusted alignment of sequences are deposited in Treebase (http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S25166).

Ethics approval and consent to participate

Collection of all samples completely complies with national and local legislation permission. Plant samples used in the study were not collected from national park or natural reserve. According to national and local legislation, no specific permission was required for collecting these plants.

Consent for publication

Not applicable.

Competing interests

The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.

Footnotes

Publisher’s Note

Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.

Yunheng Ji, Jun-Bo Yang and Ting-Shuang Yi contributed equally to this work.

Contributor Information

Yunheng Ji, Email: jiyh@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Lifang Yang, Email: yanglifang@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Mark W. Chase, Email: M.Chase@kew.org

Changkun Liu, Email: liuchangkun@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Zhenyan Yang, Email: yangzhenyan@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Jin Yang, Email: yangjin1@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Jun-Bo Yang, Email: jbyang@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Ting-Shuang Yi, Email: tingshuangyi@mail.kib.ac.cn.

Supplementary information

Supplementary information accompanies this paper at 10.1186/s12870-019-2147-6.

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Associated Data

This section collects any data citations, data availability statements, or supplementary materials included in this article.

Supplementary Materials

12870_2019_2147_MOESM1_ESM.docx (21.7KB, docx)

Additional file 1: Table S1. Summary of Illumina sequencing.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM2_ESM.jpg (2.1MB, jpg)

Additional file 2: Figure S1. Plastome map of Paris species.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM3_ESM.docx (18.8KB, docx)

Additional file 3: Table S2. Gene content of Paris plastomes.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM4_ESM.docx (19.7KB, docx)

Additional file 4: Table S3. Samples used in the study, with voucher and source information, and Genbank accessions.

12870_2019_2147_MOESM5_ESM.docx (15KB, docx)

Additional file 5: Table S4. Sequences downloaded from Genbank.

Data Availability Statement

The sequences generated in this study are available at GenBank (accession numbers are presented in Table S3). The manually adjusted alignment of sequences are deposited in Treebase (http://purl.org/phylo/treebase/phylows/study/TB2:S25166).


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