Date of Completion
12-16-2016
Embargo Period
12-16-2016
Keywords
Short Branch Attraction, Eukaryogenesis, Fundamental Bipartition of Life, Realm, Ibisii, Bacterii
Major Advisor
Dr. Johann Peter Gogarten
Associate Advisor
Dr. Ken Noll
Associate Advisor
Dr. Paul Lewis
Associate Advisor
Dr. David Benson
Associate Advisor
Dr. Jonathan Klassen
Field of Study
Genetics and Genomics
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
Open Access
Open Access
Abstract
Short Branch Attraction occurs when BLAST searches are used as surrogate for phylogenetic analysis. This results from branch length heterogeneity. The short branches, not the long, are attracting.
The root of cellular life is on the bacterial branch, meaning the Archaea and eukaryotic nucleocytoplasm form a clade. This split, the realm, is the first in the cellular tree of life. I name the clade containing the Archaea and eukaryotic nucleocytoplasm the Ibisii based on shared characteristics involved in information processing and translation. The Bacteria are members of the other realm, the Bacterii.
Eukaryogenesis is the study of how the Eukarya emerged. The beginning state is represented by the relationship between Eukarya and their closest relative, the Archaea. The ending state is represented by the location of the root within the Eukarya. I use Eukaryal stem branch length (ESBL) to inform on the relationship between Archaea and Eukarya. The long ESBL found shows a great deal of evolution, due to a product of time and rate of evolution. This suggests that Eukarya have not evolved from Archaea, but is inconclusive. I propose a new model for evolution, the Watershed of Life, with data representing two signals: vertical descent and horizontal gene transfer. All known data are consistent with only a watershed in which Archaea are monophyletic and shared genes with the Eukarya. Eukarya can be rooted using paralogs duplicated along the eukaryal stem branch to provide a closer outgroup. Unfortunately, the paralog datasets could not resolve the placement of the root.
Recommended Citation
Dick, Amanda A. PhD, "Short Branch Attraction, the Fundamental Bipartition in Cellular Life, and Eukaryogenesis" (2016). Doctoral Dissertations. 1479.
https://digitalcommons.lib.uconn.edu/dissertations/1479