Publication | Open Access
Does a tree–like phylogeny only exist at the tips in the prokaryotes?
126
Citations
24
References
2004
Year
Comparative GenomicsGeneticsTaxonomyGenomicsTree–like PhylogenyPhylogenetic AnalysisPhylogeneticsMolecular EcologySupertree MethodsPhylogeny ComparisonProtistGene TreesPhylogenomicsBioinformaticsBiologyNatural SciencesEvolutionary BiologyPhylogenetic MethodComplete GenomesMedicine
The extent to which prokaryotic evolution has been influenced by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) and therefore might be more of a network than a tree is unclear. Here we use supertree methods to ask whether a definitive prokaryotic phylogenetic tree exists and whether it can be confidently inferred using orthologous genes. We analysed an 11-taxon dataset spanning the deepest divisions of prokaryotic relationships, a 10-taxon dataset spanning the relatively recent gamma-proteobacteria and a 61-taxon dataset spanning both, using species for which complete genomes are available. Congruence among gene trees spanning deep relationships is not better than random. By contrast, a strong, almost perfect phylogenetic signal exists in gamma-proteobacterial genes. Deep-level prokaryotic relationships are difficult to infer because of signal erosion, systematic bias, hidden paralogy and/or HGT. Our results do not preclude levels of HGT that would be inconsistent with the notion of a prokaryotic phylogeny. This approach will help decide the extent to which we can say that there is a prokaryotic phylogeny and where in the phylogeny a cohesive genomic signal exists.
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