4.3 Article

A Tree of Cellular Life Inferred from a Genomic Census of Molecular Functions

Journal

JOURNAL OF MOLECULAR EVOLUTION
Volume 79, Issue 5-6, Pages 240-262

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1007/s00239-014-9637-9

Keywords

Evolution; Tree of life; Gene ontology; Phylogenomics

Funding

  1. National Science Foundation [MCB-0749836, OISE-1132791]
  2. United States Department of Agriculture [ILLU-802-909, ILLU-483-625]
  3. KRIBB Research Initiative Program
  4. Next-Generation BioGreen 21 Program, Rural Development Administration [PJ0090192013]

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Phylogenomics aims to describe evolutionary relatedness between organisms by analyzing genomic data. The common practice is to produce phylogenomic trees from molecular information in the sequence, order, and content of genes in genomes. These phylogenies describe the evolution of life and become valuable tools for taxonomy. The recent availability of structural and functional data for hundreds of genomes now offers the opportunity to study evolution using more deep, conserved, and reliable sets of molecular features. Here, we reconstruct trees of life from the functions of proteins. We start by inferring rooted phylogenomic trees and networks of organisms directly from Gene Ontology annotations. Phylogenies and networks yield novel insights into the emergence and evolution of cellular life. The ancestor of Archaea originated earlier than the ancestors of Bacteria and Eukarya and was thermophilic. In contrast, basal bacterial lineages were non-thermophilic. A close relationship between Plants and Metazoa was also identified that disagrees with the traditional Fungi-Metazoa grouping. While measures of evolutionary reticulation were minimum in Eukarya and maximum in Bacteria, the massive role of horizontal gene transfer in microbes did not materialize in phylogenomic networks. Phylogenies and networks also showed that the best reconstructions were recovered when problematic taxa (i.e., parasitic/symbiotic organisms) and horizontally transferred characters were excluded from analysis. Our results indicate that functionomic data represent a useful addition to the set of molecular characters used for tree reconstruction and that trees of cellular life carry in deep branches considerable predictive power to explain the evolution of living organisms.

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