6533b85bfe1ef96bd12ba84a

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Molecules and Morphology, Phylogenetics and Genetics

Joachim W. Kadereit

subject

GeneticsPhylogenetic treePhylogeneticsMutation (genetic algorithm)MutantIdentification (biology)Morphology (biology)Plant ScienceBiologyPhenotypeGene

description

Various explanations can be offered for the incongruence between phylogenetic hypotheses resulting from morphological and molecular data sets. Of these, the possibility that incongruence may result from the mutation of major morphogenetic genes leading to dramatic morphological divergence unaccompanied by equivalent change of the phylogenetic marker molecule(s) used is discussed in detail. As evidence for this hypothesis, several examples for such incongruence are surveyed. It seems possible that in many cases the genetic basis of the morphological characters responsible for the incongruence found may be simple, and that the genes involved may be homologous to genes known from mutant systems. It is suggested that: 1. the systematic documentation of incongruence between molecular and morphological phylogenies may help to assess the frequency of evolutionary change through the mutation of major morphogenetic genes, and that 2. the identification of major morphological characters distinguishing closely related taxa with mutant phenotypes known from mutant systems eventually may allow an experimental approach to the problem of evolutionary change resulting from major genes. Natural taxa suspected to be the result of such processes could be changed morphologically through transformation with the relevant genes.

https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1438-8677.1994.tb00809.x