Jr. Barta, INVESTIGATING PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS WITHIN THE APICOMPLEXA USINGSEQUENCE DATA - THE SEARCH FOR HOMOLOGY, Methods, 13(2), 1997, pp. 81-88
Whether stated explicitly or not, all molecular studies that seek to i
nfer ''homologies'' among sequences or that attempt to determine the '
'relatedness'' of taxa based on sequence comparisons are evolutionary
studies. The generation of a reliable evolutionary hypothesis based on
molecular sequences is dependent almost exclusively on the ability to
align sequences such that bases or amino acids in the same position o
f two sequences are positionally homologous (i.e., they share the same
position in the gene under study). The selection of suitable gene tar
gets (commonly 18S small subunit rRNA gene sequences in the Apicomplex
a) and appropriate ingroup and outgroup taxa will affect the ability t
o align sequences unambiguously. Mathematically derived alignments bas
ed on local sequence similarity have been shown to be less reliable th
an alignments based on conserved secondary structures coupled with an
analysis of compensatory base changes. Use of staggered sequence align
ments through hypervariable regions of 18S small subunit rRNA gene seq
uences in which subsets of taxa are aligned independently may permit i
nclusion of more of the primary sequences with an associated increase
in information content in the data set. The use of these highly variab
le regions is critical for determining the branching order of closely
related terminal taxa in the phylum Apicomplexa. (C) 1997 Academic Pre
ss.