Nj. Tourasse et M. Gouy, Accounting for evolutionary rate variation among sequence sites consistently changes universal phylogenies deduced from rRNA and protein-coding genes, MOL PHYL EV, 13(1), 1999, pp. 159-168
Phylogenetic analyses of gene and protein sequences have led to two major c
ompeting views of the universal phylogeny, the evolutionary tree relating t
he three kinds of living organisms, Bacteria, Archaea, and Eukarya. In the
first scheme, called "the archaebacterial tree," organisms of the same type
are clustered together. In the second scenario, called "the eocyte tree,"
the archaeal phylum of Crenarchaeota is more closely related to eukaryotes
than are other Archaea. A major property of the evolution of functional rib
osomal and protein-encoding genes is that the rate of nucleotide and amino
acid substitution varies across sequence sites. Here, using distance-based
and maximum-likelihood methods, we show that universal phylogenies of ribos
omal RNAs and RNA polymerases built by ignoring this variation are biased t
oward the archaebacterial tree because of attraction between long branches.
In contrast, taking among-site rate variability into account gives support
for the eocyte tree. (C) 1999 Academic Press.