Robustness of Phylogenetic Inference to Model Misspecification Caused by Pairwise Epistasis

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Abstract

Likelihood-based phylogenetic inference posits a probabilistic model of character state change along branches of a phylogenetic tree. These models typically assume statistical independence of sites in the sequence alignment. This is a restrictive assumption that facilitates computational tractability, but ignores how epistasis, the effect of genetic background on mutational effects, influences the evolution of functional sequences. We consider the effect of using a misspecified site-independent model on the accuracy of Bayesian phylogenetic inference in the setting of pairwise-site epistasis. Previous work has shown that as alignment length increases, tree reconstruction accuracy also increases. Here, we present a simulation study demonstrating that accuracy increases with alignment size even if the additional sites are epistatically coupled. We introduce an alignment-based test statistic that is a diagnostic for pairwise epistasis and can be used in posterior predictive checks.

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Magee, A. F., Hilton, S. K., & Dewitt, W. S. (2021). Robustness of Phylogenetic Inference to Model Misspecification Caused by Pairwise Epistasis. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 38(10), 4603–4615. https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msab163

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