A new view of the tree of life

Laura Hug(Planetary Science Institute), Brett J. Baker(The University of Texas at Austin), Karthik Anantharaman(Planetary Science Institute), Christopher T. Brown(Berkeley College), Alexander J. Probst(Planetary Science Institute), Cindy J. Castelle(Planetary Science Institute), Cristina N. Butterfield(Planetary Science Institute), Alex W Hernsdorf(Berkeley College), Yuki Amano(Japan Atomic Energy Agency), Kotaro Ise(Japan Atomic Energy Agency), Yohey Suzuki(The University of Tokyo), Natasha K. Dudek(University of California, Santa Cruz), David A. Relman(VA Palo Alto Health Care System), Kari Finstad(Berkeley College), Ronald Amundson(Berkeley College), Brian C. Thomas(Planetary Science Institute), Jillian F. Banfield(Planetary Science Institute)
Nature Microbiology
April 11, 2016
Cited by 2,119Open Access
Full Text

Abstract

The tree of life is one of the most important organizing principles in biology(1). Gene surveys suggest the existence of an enormous number of branches(2), but even an approximation of the full scale of the tree has remained elusive. Recent depictions of the tree of life have focused either on the nature of deep evolutionary relationships(3-5) or on the known, well-classified diversity of life with an emphasis on eukaryotes(6). These approaches overlook the dramatic change in our understanding of life's diversity resulting from genomic sampling of previously unexamined environments. New methods to generate genome sequences illuminate the identity of organisms and their metabolic capacities, placing them in community and ecosystem contexts(7,8). Here, we use new genomic data from over 1,000 uncultivated and little known organisms, together with published sequences, to infer a dramatically expanded version of the tree of life, with Bacteria, Archaea and Eukarya included. The depiction is both a global overview and a snapshot of the diversity within each major lineage. The results reveal the dominance of bacterial diversification and underline the importance of organisms lacking isolated representatives, with substantial evolution concentrated in a major radiation of such organisms. This tree highlights major lineages currently underrepresented in biogeochemical models and identifies radiations that are probably important for future evolutionary analyses.


Related Papers

No related papers found

Powered by citation graph analysis