AI Article Synopsis

  • This study aims to identify the closest living relatives of primates by examining genomic changes within the Euarchonta group, which includes primates, colugos, and treeshrews.
  • Researchers created phylogenetic trees using nuclear genes from various primate lineages and related species, revealing key relationships among these groups.
  • Findings suggest that colugos are the closest living relatives to primates, with their divergence dating back to the Cretaceous period, while treeshrews are estimated to have originated about 63 million years ago.

Article Abstract

A full understanding of primate morphological and genomic evolution requires the identification of their closest living relative. In order to resolve the ancestral relationships among primates and their closest relatives, we searched multispecies genome alignments for phylogenetically informative rare genomic changes within the superordinal group Euarchonta, which includes the orders Primates, Dermoptera (colugos), and Scandentia (treeshrews). We also constructed phylogenetic trees from 14 kilobases of nuclear genes for representatives from most major primate lineages, both extant colugos, and multiple treeshrews, including the pentail treeshrew, Ptilocercus lowii, the only living member of the family Ptilocercidae. A relaxed molecular clock analysis including Ptilocercus suggests that treeshrews arose approximately 63 million years ago. Our data show that colugos are the closest living relatives of primates and indicate that their divergence occurred in the Cretaceous.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1126/science.1147555DOI Listing

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