Testing Empirical Support for Evolutionary Models that Root the Tree of Life

被引:5
|
作者
Caetano-Anolles, Derek [1 ]
Nasir, Arshan [2 ]
Kim, Kyung Mo [3 ]
Caetano-Anolles, Gustavo [4 ,5 ]
机构
[1] Max Planck Inst Evolut Biol, Dept Evolutionary Genet, Plon, Germany
[2] COMSATS Univ, Dept Biosci, Islamabad 45550, Pakistan
[3] Korea Polar Res Inst, Div Polar Life Sci, Incheon, South Korea
[4] Univ Illinois, Dept Crop Sci, Evolutionary Bioinformat Lab, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
[5] Univ Illinois, Illinois Informat Inst, Urbana, IL 61801 USA
基金
美国国家科学基金会; 美国食品与农业研究所;
关键词
Phylogenetic analysis; Superkingdoms; Fold superfamily; Tree of life; Evolution; Characters; CHARACTERS; SEQUENCES; PARSIMONY; PROTEINS; DATABASE; SCOP;
D O I
10.1007/s00239-019-09891-7
中图分类号
Q5 [生物化学]; Q7 [分子生物学];
学科分类号
071010 ; 081704 ;
摘要
Trees of life (ToLs) can only be rooted with direct methods that seek optimization of character state information in ingroup taxa. This involves optimizing phylogenetic tree, model and data in an exercise of reciprocal illumination. Rooted ToLs have been built from a census of protein structural domains in proteomes using two kinds of models. Fully-reversible models use standard-ordered (additive) characters and Wagner parsimony to generate unrooted trees of proteomes that are then rooted with Weston's generality criterion. Non-reversible models directly build rooted trees with unordered characters and asymmetric stepmatrices of transformation costs that penalize gain over loss of domains. Here, we test the empirical support for the evolutionary models with character state reconstruction methods using two published proteomic datasets. We show that the reversible models match reconstructed frequencies of character change and are faithful to the distribution of serial homologies in trees. In contrast, the non-reversible models go counter to trends in the data they must explain, attracting organisms with large proteomes to the base of the rooted trees while violating the triangle inequality of distances. This can lead to serious reconstruction inconsistencies that show model inadequacy. Our study highlights the aprioristic perils of disposing of countering evidence in natural history reconstruction.
引用
收藏
页码:131 / 142
页数:12
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Evidence that the root of the tree of life is not within the archaea
    Skophammer, Ryan G.
    Herbold, Craig W.
    Rivera, Maria C.
    Servin, Jacqueline A.
    Lake, James A.
    MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION, 2006, 23 (09) : 1648 - 1651
  • [22] The Root of the Tree of Life in the Light of the Covarion Model
    Philippe Lopez
    Patrick Forterre
    Hervé Philippe
    Journal of Molecular Evolution, 1999, 49 : 496 - 508
  • [23] Empirical Evaluation of a Nesting Testability Transformation for Evolutionary Testing
    McMinn, Phil
    Binkley, David
    Harman, Mark
    ACM TRANSACTIONS ON SOFTWARE ENGINEERING AND METHODOLOGY, 2009, 18 (03)
  • [24] THE SIGNIFICANCE OF TESTING EMPIRICAL NONNESTED MODELS
    MCALEER, M
    JOURNAL OF ECONOMETRICS, 1995, 67 (01) : 149 - 171
  • [25] Cultural life: Theory and empirical testing
    Baciu, Dan C.
    BIOSYSTEMS, 2020, 197
  • [26] Fatigue testing of the fir tree root of a turbine blade
    Mest'anek, Petr
    Kubin, Zdenek
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE 48TH INTERNATIONAL SCIENTIFIC CONFERENCE ON EXPERIMENTALNI ANALYZA NAPETI 2010 EXPERIMENTAL STRESS ANALYSIS, 2010, : 261 - 268
  • [27] Deriving evolutionary tree models of the oncogenesis of endometrial adenocarcinoma
    Chen, Lei
    Nordlander, Carola
    Behboudi, Afrouz
    Olsson, Bjorn
    Levan, Karin Klinga
    INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL OF CANCER, 2007, 120 (02) : 292 - 296
  • [28] TESTING NULL MODELS IN QUESTIONS OF EVOLUTIONARY SUCCESS
    SLOWINSKI, JB
    GUYER, C
    SYSTEMATIC ZOOLOGY, 1989, 38 (02): : 189 - 191
  • [29] Evolutionary biology - Preparing the ground for a modern 'tree of life'
    Pennisi, E
    SCIENCE, 2001, 293 (5537) : 1979 - 1980
  • [30] Calibrating the Tree of Life: fossils, molecules and evolutionary timescales
    Forest, Felix
    ANNALS OF BOTANY, 2009, 104 (05) : 789 - 794