AI Article Synopsis

  • Lateral gene transfer (LGT) is often used to explain conflicting phylogenetic results in eukaryotes, particularly when a bacterial gene appears in a eukaryotic genome without clear mitochondrial or plastid origins.
  • Research reveals that instances of lateral transfers may involve multiple distantly related eukaryotic groups sharing the same bacterial gene, complicating the perceived simplicity of such transfers.
  • The findings highlight the importance of sampling in understanding gene distribution complexity, showing that what seems straightforward may actually involve intricate evolutionary histories.

Article Abstract

Background: Lateral gene transfer is increasingly invoked to explain phylogenetic results that conflict with our understanding of organismal relationships. In eukaryotes, the most common observation interpreted in this way is the appearance of a bacterial gene (one that is not clearly derived from the mitochondrion or plastid) in a eukaryotic nuclear genome. Ideally such an observation would involve a single eukaryote or a small group of related eukaryotes encoding a gene from a specific bacterial lineage.

Results: Here we show that several apparently simple cases of lateral transfer are actually more complex than they originally appeared: in these instances we find that two or more distantly related eukaryotic groups share the same bacterial gene, resulting in a punctate distribution. Specifically, we describe phylogenies of three core carbon metabolic enzymes: transketolase, glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase and ribulose-5-phosphate-3-epimerase. Phylogenetic trees of each of these enzymes includes a strongly-supported clade consisting of several eukaryotes that are distantly related at the organismal level, but whose enzymes are apparently all derived from the same lateral transfer. With less sampling any one of these examples would appear to be a simple case of bacterium-to-eukaryote lateral transfer; taken together, their evolutionary histories cannot be so simple. The distributions of these genes may represent ancient paralogy events or genes that have been transferred from bacteria to an ancient ancestor of the eukaryotes that retain them. They may alternatively have been transferred laterally from a bacterium to a single eukaryotic lineage and subsequently transferred between distantly related eukaryotes.

Conclusion: Determining how complex the distribution of a transferred gene is depends on the sampling available. These results show that seemingly simple cases may be revealed to be more complex with greater sampling, suggesting many bacterial genes found in eukaryotic genomes may have a punctate distribution.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1920508PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2148-7-89DOI Listing

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