Titel
Physiology, phylogeny, and LUCA
Autor*in
William Martin
Institute for Molecular Evolution, Heinrich-Heine Universität Düsseldorf
Autor*in
Madeline Weiss
Institute for Molecular Evolution, Heinrich-Heine Universität Düsseldorf
... show all
Abstract
Genomes record their own history. But if we want to look all the way back to life’s beginnings some 4 billion years ago, the record of microbial evolution that is preserved in prokaryotic genomes is not easy to read. Microbiology has a lot in common with geology in that regard. Geologists know that plate tectonics and erosion have erased much of the geological record, with ancient rocks being truly rare. The same is true of microbes. Lateral gene transfer (LGT) and sequence divergence have erased much of the evolutionary record that was once written in genomes, and it is not obvious which genes among sequenced genomes are genuinely ancient. Which genes trace to the last universal ancestor, LUCA? The classical approach has been to look for genes that are universally distributed. Another approach is to make all trees for all genes, and sift out the trees where signals have been overwritten by LGT. What is left ought to be ancient. If we do that, what do we find?
Stichwort
early evolutionautotrophygeochemistryacetogensmethanogens
Objekt-Typ
Sprache
Englisch [eng]
Persistent identifier
https://phaidra.univie.ac.at/o:533925
Erschienen in
Titel
Microbial Cell
Band
3
Ausgabe
12
Seitenanfang
582
Seitenende
587
Verlag
Shared Science Publishers OG
Erscheinungsdatum
2016
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