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Dive into the research topics where Anja Rautenberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Anja Rautenberg.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2009

Phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial substitution rate variation in the angiosperm tribe Sileneae

Daniel B. Sloan; Bengt Oxelman; Anja Rautenberg; Douglas R. Taylor

Recent phylogenetic studies have revealed that the mitochondrial genome of the angiosperm Silene noctiflora (Caryophyllaceae) has experienced a massive mutation-driven acceleration in substitution rate, placing it among the fastest evolving eukaryotic genomes ever identified. To date, it appears that other species within Silene have maintained more typical substitution rates, suggesting that the acceleration in S. noctiflora is a recent and isolated evolutionary event. This assessment, however, is based on a very limited sampling of taxa within this diverse genus. We analyzed the substitution rates in 4 mitochondrial genes (atp1, atp9, cox3 and nad9) across a broad sample of 74 species within Silene and related genera in the tribe Sileneae. We found that S. noctiflora shares its history of elevated mitochondrial substitution rate with the closely related species S. turkestanica. Another section of the genus (Conoimorpha) has experienced an acceleration of comparable magnitude. The phylogenetic data remain ambiguous as to whether the accelerations in these two clades represent independent evolutionary events or a single ancestral change. Rate variation among genes was equally dramatic. Most of the genus exhibited elevated rates for atp9 such that the average tree-wide substitution rate for this gene approached the values for the fastest evolving branches in the other three genes. In addition, some species exhibited major accelerations in atp1 and/or cox3 with no correlated change in other genes. Rates of non-synonymous substitution did not increase proportionally with synonymous rates but instead remained low and relatively invariant. The patterns of phylogenetic divergence within Sileneae suggest enormous variability in plant mitochondrial mutation rates and reveal a complex interaction of gene and species effects. The variation in rates across genomic and phylogenetic scales raises questions about the mechanisms responsible for the evolution of mutation rates in plant mitochondrial genomes.


Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution | 2010

Geographic and phylogenetic patterns in Silene section Melandrium (Caryophyllaceae) as inferred from chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequences.

Anja Rautenberg; Louise Hathaway; Bengt Oxelman; Honor C. Prentice

The phylogenetic relationships between the five dioecious species in Silene section Melandrium (Caryophyllaceae) and their putative hermaphrodite relatives are investigated based on an extensive geographic and taxonomic sample, using DNA sequence data from the chloroplast genome and the nuclear ribosomal ITS region. The hermaphrodite S. noctiflora (the type species of section Elisanthe) is distantly related to the dioecious species. With the exception of chloroplast sequences in one S. latifolia population from Turkey, the dioecious taxa form a strongly supported monophyletic group (Silene section Melandrium). The phylogenetic structure within section Melandrium differs between chloroplast and nuclear sequences. While there is extensive sharing of chloroplast haplotypes among all the dioecious species (the observed patterns reflect geographic structure), the nuclear ITS phylogeny shows a higher degree of taxonomic structure. Chloroplast-sharing by the section Melandrium species is most plausibly explained by a history of hybridization and extensive backcrossing.


Systematic Botany | 2012

Phylogenetic Relationships of Silene multinervia and Silene Section Conoimorpha (Caryophyllaceae)

Anja Rautenberg; Daniel B. Sloan; Vivian Aldén; Bengt Oxelman

Abstract The Californian Silene multinervia (Caryophyllaceae) and Eurasian members of section Conoimorpha in subgenus Behenantha are the only Silene species that have calyces with 15 or more prominent parallel, unbranched veins. We show that S. multinervia, which has been considered a recent introduction of the Asian S. coniflora (section Conoimorpha) to North America, is clearly not synonymous with the latter species based on morphological or molecular data. We present a chromosome count of S. multinervia (2n = 24), which is different from the base number x = 10, a putative synapomorphy for section Conoimorpha. Gene trees based on sequences from three different genomes fail to group S. multinervia with the European section Conoimorpha species. The S. multinervia sequences form a monophyletic group placed in an unresolved position within subgenus Behenantha.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2008

Conflicting phylogenetic signals in the SlX1/Y1 gene in Silene.

Anja Rautenberg; Dmitry A. Filatov; Bodil Svennblad; Nahid Heidari; Bengt Oxelman

BackgroundIncreasing evidence from DNA sequence data has revealed that phylogenies based on different genes may drastically differ from each other. This may be due to either inter- or intralineage processes, or to methodological or stochastic errors. Here we investigate a spectacular case where two parts of the same gene (SlX1/Y1) show conflicting phylogenies within Silene (Caryophyllaceae). SlX1 and SlY1 are sex-linked genes on the sex chromosomes of dioecious members of Silene sect. Elisanthe.ResultsWe sequenced the homologues of the SlX1/Y1 genes in several Sileneae species. We demonstrate that different parts of the SlX1/Y1 region give different phylogenetic signals. The major discrepancy is that Silene vulgaris and S. sect. Conoimorpha (S. conica and relatives) exchange positions. To determine whether gene duplication followed by recombination (an intralineage process) may explain the phylogenetic conflict in the Silene SlX1/Y1 gene, we use a novel probabilistic, multiple primer-pair PCR approach. We did not find any evidence supporting gene duplication/loss as explanation to the phylogenetic conflict.ConclusionThe phylogenetic conflict in the Silene SlX1/Y1 gene cannot be explained by paralogy or artefacts, such as in vitro recombination during PCR. The support for the conflict is strong enough to exclude methodological or stochastic errors as likely sources. Instead, the phylogenetic incongruence may have been caused by recombination of two divergent alleles following ancient interspecific hybridization or incomplete lineage sorting. These events probably took place several million years ago. This example clearly demonstrates that different parts of the genome may have different evolutionary histories and stresses the importance of using multiple genes in reconstruction of taxonomic relationships.


BMC Evolutionary Biology | 2010

Erratum to: Phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial substitution rate variation in the angiosperm tribe Sileneae

Daniel B. Sloan; Bengt Oxelman; Anja Rautenberg; Douglas R. Taylor


Archive | 2009

Phylogenetic relationships and optimal genealogical species delimitations of Silene section Melandrium (Caryophyllaceae)

Anja Rautenberg; Louise Hathaway; Honor C. Prentice; Bengt Oxelman


Archive | 2009

Phylogenetic relationships of Silene section Elisanthe (Caryophyllaceae) as inferred from chloroplast and nuclear DNA sequences

Anja Rautenberg; Louise Hathaway; Bengt Oxelman; Honor C. Prentice


Silene: from populations to genes; pp 34-34 (2008) | 2008

Phylogenetic position of Silene sect. Elisanthe

Anja Rautenberg; Louise Hathaway; Dimitry Filatov; Honor C. Prentice; Bengt Oxelman


Archive | 2007

Recombination between distinct lineages in Silene

Anja Rautenberg; Bengt Oxelman


XVII International Botanical Congress: Vienna, Austria, Europe 17-23 July 2005 | 2005

Treelike and reticulate phylogeny of SIleneae and its implications on taxonomy

Bengt Oxelman; Magnus Popp; Georgy Lazkov; Bozo Frajman; Frida Eggens; Per Erixon; Elisabeth Långström; Anja Rautenberg; Nahid Heidari

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Daniel B. Sloan

Colorado State University

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