| Literature DB >> 32714303 |
Josip Skejo1,2, Damjan Franjević2.
Abstract
Entities:
Keywords: Eukaryomorpha; alphaproteobacteria; archaea; eukaryogenesis; hybridization; lichens; paraphyly; symbiogenesis
Year: 2020 PMID: 32714303 PMCID: PMC7343848 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2020.01380
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Figure 1(A–C) Schematic overview of apomorphic characters and states. Synapomorphy is shared by all the members of a group descending from a single ancestor. Plesiomorphy is ancestral and as such not present in all the members of a group. Monophyletic groups are characterized by apomorphies: synapomorphies in holophyletic or plesiomorphies in paraphyletic groups. Topology of the cladograms shown in (A–C) is the same, but the distributions of characters and their states are different. Case (A) shows a paraphyletic group from which a holophyletic descendant is excluded. Case (B) shows a paraphyletic group with two holophyletic descendants excluded. Case (C) shows two paraphyletic groups and a holophyletic group. (D) Schematic representation of the evolution of life from its last common ancestor (LUCA), which gave rise to Bacteria and Archaea [the diversity is simplified, and descendants of archeal trichotomy represent Euryarchaeota, TACK+Asgard (Asgard is sister to LECA)]. LECA is the last eukaryotic common ancestor, which originated via a polyphyletic event: symbiogenesis of an archaeon (A) which gave rise to nuclei, and Bacteria (B), specifically Alphaproteobacteria, which gave rise to mitochondria. Cyanobacteria (C) are a group of bacteria from which the primary plastid (D) originated. The dotted lines represent groups with uncertain positions within Eukaryotes.