400 Pages 165 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    400 Pages 165 B/W Illustrations
    by CRC Press

    Phylogenomics: A Primer, Second Edition is for advanced undergraduate and graduate biology students studying molecular biology, comparative biology, evolution, genomics, and biodiversity. This book explains the essential concepts underlying the storage and manipulation of genomics level data, construction of phylogenetic trees, population genetics, natural selection, the tree of life, DNA barcoding, and metagenomics. The inclusion of problem-solving exercises in each chapter provides students with a solid grasp of the important molecular and evolutionary questions facing modern biologists as well as the tools needed to answer them.

    Preface

    Acknowledgements

    Section I. Foundations of Phylogenomics

    1. What is Phylogenomics?

    2. The Biology and Sequencing of Genetic Information: DNA, RNA, and Proteins

    3. Evolutionary Principles: Populations and Trees

    Section II. Data

    4. Data Storage—The Basics

    5. Sequence Alignment and Searching Sequence Databases

    6. Multiple Alignments

    7. Genome Sequencing and Annotation

    8. Genomics Databases: Genomes and Transcriptomes

    9. Amplicon Databases: BoLD and Bacterial 16S rDNA Databases

    Section III. Phylogenetic/Phylogenomic Analysis

    10. Introduction to Tree Building

    11. Distance and Clustering

    12. Maximum Likelihood

    13. Search Strategies and Robustness

    14. Rate Heterogeneity, Long Branch Attraction, and Likelihood Models

    15. Bayesian Approaches in Phylogenetics

    16. Incongruence of Gene Trees

    17. Phylogenetic Programs and Websites

    Section IV. Population Genomics

    18. Population Genetics and Genomes

    19. Population Genomics Approaches

    20. Detecting Natural Selection: The Basics

    21. Refining the Approach to Natural Selection at the Molecular Level

    Section V. Phylogenomics in Action

    22. Constructing Phylogenomic Matrices

    23. Phylogenomics and the Tree of Life

    24. Comparative Genomics

    25. Environmental DNA (eDNA)

    26. Phylogenomic Approaches to Understanding Gene Function and Evolution

    Index

    Biography

    Rob DeSalle is Curator at the Sackler Institute of Comparative Genomics in the Division of invertebrate Zoology at the American Museum of Natural History. DeSalle works in molecular systematics, microbial evolution, and genomics. His current research concerns the development of bioinformatic tools to handle large-scale genomics problems using phylogenetic systematic approaches. Dr. DeSalle has worked closely with colleagues from Cold Spring Harbor Labs, New York University, and the New York Botanical Garden on seed plant genomics and development of tools to establish gene family membership on a genome- wide scale. His group also focuses on microbial genomics, taxonomy, and systematics. In particular, they approach tree-of-life questions concerning microbial life using whole genome information.

    Jeffrey Rosenfeld is Assistant Professor for Pathology and Laboratory Medicine and the Manager of the Biomedical Informatics Shared Resource at the Rutgers Cancer institute. His research focuses on the use of new genomics technologies to investigate previously unsolvable problems. He is currently working with long-read and single-cell sequencing. Dr. Rosenfeld also has an appointment as a Research Associate at the American Museum of Natural History where he works on whole-genome phylogenetics. With collaborators at the Museum, he has sequenced and assembled the genomes of non-model insects.

    Michael Tessler is Adjunct Faculty in Ecology at Sterling College. He received his PhD from the Richard Gilder Graduate School, American Museum of Natural History. His research explores the evolution and ecology of overlooked organisms and includes phylogenetic research on terrestrial leeches, combining his collections from China and Cambodia with AMNH’s legacy collections to produce a phylogenetic revision of all terrestrial leech groups. His dissertation focused on the evolution of leech anticoagulants and on how leeches process difficult to digest blood such as urea-packed shark blood, and the ways anticoagulants evolved in leech lineages that no longer drink blood and instead eat invertebrates.

    "This is a top-quality book that is timely and engaging. It is a necessary and
    welcome update of the first edition that is now several years old. I would
    recommend it to my colleagues teaching this material without reservation."

    - Mark F. Sanders, PhD, UC Davis College of Biological Sciences