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Resolution: standard / high Figure 1.
Five different current views of the general shape of microbial evolution. (a) The 'classical' tree derived from comparison of rRNA sequence and rooted with ancient
paralogs. It is thought to arise from a collection of non-cellular supramolecular
aggregates in the primordial soup, between which there is lateral gene transfer (LGT).
A process dubbed genetic annealing gives rise to cells. In this scenario, the three
domains of life - Eubacteria, Archaebacteria and Eukaryotes - branch off in that order.
(b) The introns-early tree. This proposes that the ancestor of all three domains contained
introns, which were lost in the Archaebacteria and Euacteria. (c) The neomuran tree. This introduces an ancestral group of organisms from which Archaeabacteria
and Eukaryotes arose after the loss of the eubacterial-type cell wall in one lineage
(the neomuran revolution). (d) The symbiotic tree. This proposes that the ancestor of eukaryotes originated by the
endosymbiosis of one prokaryote (X) in another prokaryote host (Y), giving rise to
nucleated (n) eukaryotic cells. The different groups of eukaryotes arose by subsequent
separate endosymbiotic events involving various prokaryotes - the ancestors of plastids
(p) and mitochondria (m) - in host cells of this lineage. (e) The prokaryote-host tree. This also incorporates endosymbiosis as the origin of mitochondria
and plastids, but proposes that the endosymbiotic event that gave rise to a cell containing
nucleus and mitochondria occurred in a prokaryotic host. This leads to a ring-like
relationship between the ancestral organisms rather than a tree (see inset 2). This
model also invokes extensive LGT throughout microbial evolution (see inset 1). See
text for further details.
Dagan and Martin Genome Biology 2006 7:118 doi:10.1186/gb-2006-7-10-118 |