Phylogenetic analysis of gene expression
Casey W. Dunn, Xi Luo, Zhijin Wu

TL;DR
This paper discusses the potential and challenges of phylogenetic analysis of gene expression, highlighting issues with data comparability, high-dimensional datasets, and incongruent gene trees, and proposes solutions for these problems.
Contribution
It outlines key design considerations and solutions for phylogenetic analysis of gene expression, addressing data measurement, analytical methods, and gene tree incongruences.
Findings
Identifies challenges in comparing gene expression across species.
Proposes methods for analyzing high-dimensional gene expression data.
Addresses issues with gene tree incongruence due to evolutionary events.
Abstract
Phylogenetic analyses of gene expression have great potential for addressing a wide range of questions. These analyses will, for example, identify genes that have evolutionary shifts in expression that are correlated with evolutionary changes in morphological, physiological, and developmental characters of interest. This will provide entirely new opportunities to identify genes related to particular phenotypes. There are, however, three key challenges that must be addressed for such studies to realize their potential. First, gene expression data must be measured from multiple species, some of which may be field collected, and parameterized in such a way that they can be compared across species. Second, it will be necessary to develop phylogenetic comparative methods suitable for large multidimensional datasets. In most phylogenetic comparative studies to date, the number n of…
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