A New Analysis of Archaea–Bacteria Domain Separation: Variable Phylogenetic Distance and the Tempo of Early Evolution

Author:

Berkemer Sarah J123ORCID,McGlynn Shawn E456ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Max Planck Institute for Mathematics in the Sciences, Leipzig, Germany

2. Bioinformatics Group, Department of Computer Science, University Leipzig, Leipzig, Germany

3. Competence Center for Scalable Data Services and Solutions, Dresden/Leipzig, Germany

4. Earth-Life Science Institute, Tokyo Institute of Technology, Meguro, Tokyo, Japan

5. Blue Marble Space Institute of Science, Seattle, WA

6. RIKEN Center for Sustainable Resource Science (CSRS), Saitama, Japan

Abstract

Abstract Comparative genomics and molecular phylogenetics are foundational for understanding biological evolution. Although many studies have been made with the aim of understanding the genomic contents of early life, uncertainty remains. A study by Weiss et al. (Weiss MC, Sousa FL, Mrnjavac N, Neukirchen S, Roettger M, Nelson-Sathi S, Martin WF. 2016. The physiology and habitat of the last universal common ancestor. Nat Microbiol. 1(9):16116.) identified a number of protein families in the last universal common ancestor of archaea and bacteria (LUCA) which were not found in previous works. Here, we report new research that suggests the clustering approaches used in this previous study undersampled protein families, resulting in incomplete phylogenetic trees which do not reflect protein family evolution. Phylogenetic analysis of protein families which include more sequence homologs rejects a simple LUCA hypothesis based on phylogenetic separation of the bacterial and archaeal domains for a majority of the previously identified LUCA proteins (∼82%). To supplement limitations of phylogenetic inference derived from incompletely populated orthologous groups and to test the hypothesis of a period of rapid evolution preceding the separation of the domains, we compared phylogenetic distances both within and between domains, for thousands of orthologous groups. We find a substantial diversity of interdomain versus intradomain branch lengths, even among protein families which exhibit a single domain separating branch and are thought to be associated with the LUCA. Additionally, phylogenetic trees with long interdomain branches relative to intradomain branches are enriched in information categories of protein families in comparison to those associated with metabolic functions. These results provide a new view of protein family evolution and temper claims about the phenotype and habitat of the LUCA.

Funder

NSF

Biochemical, Genetic, Metabolic, and Isotopic Constraints on an Ancient Thiobiosphere

JSPS

KAKENHI

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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