The inference of gene trees with species trees
Gergely J. Sz\"ollosi, Eric Tannier, Vincent Daubin, Bastien Boussau

TL;DR
This paper reviews models linking gene and species trees, highlighting how integrating these models with sequence evolution enhances gene tree reconstruction and our understanding of genome evolution.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive review of models describing gene and species tree relationships, emphasizing the need for methods that handle multiple evolutionary processes simultaneously.
Findings
Combining gene-species tree models with sequence evolution improves gene tree accuracy.
Models accounting for duplication, loss, transfer, and incomplete lineage sorting are essential.
Empirical and simulation studies support integrated modeling approaches.
Abstract
Molecular phylogeny has focused mainly on improving models for the reconstruction of gene trees based on sequence alignments. Yet, most phylogeneticists seek to reveal the history of species. Although the histories of genes and species are tightly linked, they are seldom identical, because genes duplicate, are lost or horizontally transferred, and because alleles can co-exist in populations for periods that may span several speciation events. Building models describing the relationship between gene and species trees can thus improve the reconstruction of gene trees when a species tree is known, and vice-versa. Several approaches have been proposed to solve the problem in one direction or the other, but in general neither gene trees nor species trees are known. Only a few studies have attempted to jointly infer gene trees and species trees. In this article we review the various models…
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Taxonomy
TopicsGenomics and Phylogenetic Studies · Genetic diversity and population structure · Chromosomal and Genetic Variations
