Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest

<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Comparative genomics has revealed extensive horizontal gene transfer among prokaryotes, a development that is often considered to undermine the 'tree of life' concept. However, the possibility remains that a statistical cen...

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Main Authors: Puigbò Pere, Wolf Yuri I, Koonin Eugene V
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2009-07-01
Series:Journal of Biology
Online Access:http://jbiol.com/content/8/6/59
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spelling doaj-baaf45e3952146e78964bcb30805f7fe2020-11-25T03:04:49ZengBMCJournal of Biology1478-58541475-49242009-07-01865910.1186/jbiol159Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forestPuigbò PereWolf Yuri IKoonin Eugene V<p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Comparative genomics has revealed extensive horizontal gene transfer among prokaryotes, a development that is often considered to undermine the 'tree of life' concept. However, the possibility remains that a statistical central trend still exists in the phylogenetic 'forest of life'.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A comprehensive comparative analysis of a 'forest' of 6,901 phylogenetic trees for prokaryotic genes revealed a consistent phylogenetic signal, particularly among 102 nearly universal trees, despite high levels of topological inconsistency, probably due to horizontal gene transfer. Horizontal transfers seemed to be distributed randomly and did not obscure the central trend. The nearly universal trees were topologically similar to numerous other trees. Thus, the nearly universal trees might reflect a significant central tendency, although they cannot represent the forest completely. However, topological consistency was seen mostly at shallow tree depths and abruptly dropped at the level of the radiation of archaeal and bacterial phyla, suggesting that early phases of evolution could be non-tree-like (Biological Big Bang). Simulations of evolution under compressed cladogenesis or Biological Big Bang yielded a better fit to the observed dependence between tree inconsistency and phylogenetic depth for the compressed cladogenesis model.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Horizontal gene transfer is pervasive among prokaryotes: very few gene trees are fully consistent, making the original tree of life concept obsolete. A central trend that most probably represents vertical inheritance is discernible throughout the evolution of archaea and bacteria, although compressed cladogenesis complicates unambiguous resolution of the relationships between the major archaeal and bacterial clades.</p> http://jbiol.com/content/8/6/59
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Puigbò Pere
Wolf Yuri I
Koonin Eugene V
spellingShingle Puigbò Pere
Wolf Yuri I
Koonin Eugene V
Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
Journal of Biology
author_facet Puigbò Pere
Wolf Yuri I
Koonin Eugene V
author_sort Puigbò Pere
title Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
title_short Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
title_full Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
title_fullStr Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
title_full_unstemmed Search for a 'Tree of Life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
title_sort search for a 'tree of life' in the thicket of the phylogenetic forest
publisher BMC
series Journal of Biology
issn 1478-5854
1475-4924
publishDate 2009-07-01
description <p>Abstract</p> <p>Background</p> <p>Comparative genomics has revealed extensive horizontal gene transfer among prokaryotes, a development that is often considered to undermine the 'tree of life' concept. However, the possibility remains that a statistical central trend still exists in the phylogenetic 'forest of life'.</p> <p>Results</p> <p>A comprehensive comparative analysis of a 'forest' of 6,901 phylogenetic trees for prokaryotic genes revealed a consistent phylogenetic signal, particularly among 102 nearly universal trees, despite high levels of topological inconsistency, probably due to horizontal gene transfer. Horizontal transfers seemed to be distributed randomly and did not obscure the central trend. The nearly universal trees were topologically similar to numerous other trees. Thus, the nearly universal trees might reflect a significant central tendency, although they cannot represent the forest completely. However, topological consistency was seen mostly at shallow tree depths and abruptly dropped at the level of the radiation of archaeal and bacterial phyla, suggesting that early phases of evolution could be non-tree-like (Biological Big Bang). Simulations of evolution under compressed cladogenesis or Biological Big Bang yielded a better fit to the observed dependence between tree inconsistency and phylogenetic depth for the compressed cladogenesis model.</p> <p>Conclusions</p> <p>Horizontal gene transfer is pervasive among prokaryotes: very few gene trees are fully consistent, making the original tree of life concept obsolete. A central trend that most probably represents vertical inheritance is discernible throughout the evolution of archaea and bacteria, although compressed cladogenesis complicates unambiguous resolution of the relationships between the major archaeal and bacterial clades.</p>
url http://jbiol.com/content/8/6/59
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