Development of a Target Enrichment Probe Set for Conifer (REMcon)

Biology (Basel). 2024 May 22;13(6):361. doi: 10.3390/biology13060361.

Abstract

Conifers are an ecologically and economically important seed plant group that can provide significant insights into the evolution of land plants. Molecular phylogenetics has developed as an important approach in evolutionary studies, although there have been relatively few studies of conifers that employ large-scale data sourced from multiple nuclear genes. Target enrichment sequencing (target capture, exon capture, or Hyb-Seq) has developed as a key approach in modern phylogenomic studies. However, until now, there has been no bait set that specifically targets the entire conifer clade. REMcon is a target sequence capture probe set intended for family- and species-level phylogenetic studies of conifers that target c. 100 single-copy nuclear loci. We tested the REMcon probe set using 69 species, including 44 conifer genera across six families and four other gymnosperm taxa, to evaluate the efficiency of target capture to efficiently generate comparable DNA sequence data across conifers. The recovery of target loci was high, with, on average, 94% of the targeted regions recovered across samples with high read coverage. A phylogenetic analysis of these data produced a well-supported topology that is consistent with the current understanding of relationships among conifers. The REMcon bait set will be useful in generating relatively large-scale nuclear data sets consistently for any conifer lineage.

Keywords: conifers; gymnosperms; phylogenomics; probe design; target capture sequencing.

Grants and funding

This research was funded by the Botanic Gardens and State Herbarium collaborative student support 2020–2022; collections digitization support from the Board of the Botanic Gardens and State Herbarium (South Australia) 2021–2022; PhD Student support from the University of Adelaide, School of Biological Sciences 2020–2022; and a capacity building grant from The Environment Institute, the University of Adelaide 2021; Key Research Program of Frontier Sciences, CAS (ZDBS-LY-7001), the National Natural Science Foundation of China (42211540718), the Top-notch Young Talents Project of Yunnan Provincial ‘Ten Thousand Talents Program’ (YNWR-QNBJ-2018-146), the Xingdian Talent Support Program of Yunnan Province (XDYC-QNRC-2022-0068), and the CAS ‘Light of West China’ Program. Raees Khan was supported by the Postdoctoral International Exchange Program of the Office of China Postdoctoral Council, the Postdoctoral Targeted Funding, and the Postdoctoral Research Fund of Yunnan Province.