[HTML][HTML] FastTree 2–approximately maximum-likelihood trees for large alignments

MN Price, PS Dehal, AP Arkin - PloS one, 2010 - journals.plos.org
PloS one, 2010journals.plos.org
Background We recently described FastTree, a tool for inferring phylogenies for alignments
with up to hundreds of thousands of sequences. Here, we describe improvements to
FastTree that improve its accuracy without sacrificing scalability. Methodology/Principal
Findings Where FastTree 1 used nearest-neighbor interchanges (NNIs) and the minimum-
evolution criterion to improve the tree, FastTree 2 adds minimum-evolution subtree-pruning-
regrafting (SPRs) and maximum-likelihood NNIs. FastTree 2 uses heuristics to restrict the …
Background
We recently described FastTree, a tool for inferring phylogenies for alignments with up to hundreds of thousands of sequences. Here, we describe improvements to FastTree that improve its accuracy without sacrificing scalability.
Methodology/Principal Findings
Where FastTree 1 used nearest-neighbor interchanges (NNIs) and the minimum-evolution criterion to improve the tree, FastTree 2 adds minimum-evolution subtree-pruning-regrafting (SPRs) and maximum-likelihood NNIs. FastTree 2 uses heuristics to restrict the search for better trees and estimates a rate of evolution for each site (the “CAT” approximation). Nevertheless, for both simulated and genuine alignments, FastTree 2 is slightly more accurate than a standard implementation of maximum-likelihood NNIs (PhyML 3 with default settings). Although FastTree 2 is not quite as accurate as methods that use maximum-likelihood SPRs, most of the splits that disagree are poorly supported, and for large alignments, FastTree 2 is 100–1,000 times faster. FastTree 2 inferred a topology and likelihood-based local support values for 237,882 distinct 16S ribosomal RNAs on a desktop computer in 22 hours and 5.8 gigabytes of memory.
Conclusions/Significance
FastTree 2 allows the inference of maximum-likelihood phylogenies for huge alignments. FastTree 2 is freely available at http://www.microbesonline.org/fasttree.
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