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Dryad

Data from: Turning the crown upside down: gene tree parsimony roots the eukaryotic tree of life

Cite this dataset

Katz, Laura A.; Grant, Jessica R.; Parfrey, Laura Wegener; Burleigh, J. Gordon (2012). Data from: Turning the crown upside down: gene tree parsimony roots the eukaryotic tree of life [Dataset]. Dryad. https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.11vq033v

Abstract

The first analyses of gene sequence data indicated that the eukaryotic tree of life consisted of a long stem of microbial groups ‘topped’ by a crown containing plants, animals, and fungi and their microbial relatives. While more recent multigene concatenated analyses have refined the relationships among the many branches of eukaryotes, the root of the eukaryotic tree of life has remained elusive. Inferring the root of extant eukaryotes is challenging because of the age of the group (∼1.7-2.1 billion years old), tremendous heterogeneity in rates of evolution among lineages, and lack of obvious outgroups for many genes. Here we reconstruct a rooted phylogeny of extant eukaryotes based on minimizing the number of duplications and losses among a collection of gene trees. This approach does not require outgroup sequences or assumptions of orthology among sequences. We also explore the impact of taxon and gene sampling, and assess support for alternative hypotheses for the root. Using 20 gene trees from 84 diverse eukaryotic lineages, this approach recovers robust eukaryotic clades and reveals evidence for a eukaryotic root that lies between the Opisthokonta (animals, fungi and their microbial relatives) and all remaining eukaryotes.

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