Evolution of microbes and viruses: a paradigm shift in evolutionary biology?
Eugene V. Koonin,Yuri I. Wolf +1 more
TL;DR: For example, this article showed that pervasive horizontal gene transfer (HGT) in large part mediated by viruses and plasmids shapes the genomes of archaea and bacteria and calls for a radical revision (if not abandonment) of the Tree of Life concept.
read more
Abstract: When Charles Darwin formulated the central principles of evolutionary biology in the Origin of Species in 1859 and the architects of the Modern Synthesis integrated these principles with population genetics almost a century later, the principal if not the sole objects of evolutionary biology were multicellular eukaryotes, primarily animals and plants. Before the advent of efficient gene sequencing, all attempts to extend evolutionary studies to bacteria have been futile. Sequencing of the rRNA genes in thousands of microbes allowed the construction of the three- domain ‘ribosomal Tree of Life’ that was widely thought to have resolved the evolutionary relationships between the cellular life forms. However, subsequent massive sequencing of numerous, complete microbial genomes revealed novel evolutionary phenomena, the most fundamental of these being: i) pervasive horizontal gene transfer (HGT), in large part mediated by viruses and plasmids, that shapes the genomes of archaea and bacteria and call for a radical revision (if not abandonment) of the Tree of Life concept, ii) Lamarckian-type inheritance that appears to be critical for antivirus defense and other forms of adaptation in prokaryotes, and iii) evolution of evolvability, i.e. dedicated mechanisms for evolution such as vehicles for HGT and stress-induced mutagenesis systems. In the non-cellular part of the microbial world, phylogenomics and metagenomics of viruses and related selfish genetic elements revealed enormous genetic and molecular diversity and extremely high abundance of viruses that come across as the dominant biological entities on earth. Furthermore, the perennial arms race between viruses and their hosts is one of the defining factors of evolution. Thus, microbial phylogenomics adds new dimensions to the fundamental picture of evolution even as the principle of descent with modification discovered by Darwin and the laws of population genetics remain at the core of evolutionary biology.
read more
Chat with Paper
AI Agents for this Paper
Find similar papers on Google Scholar, PubMed and Arxiv
Write a critical review of this paper
Analyze citations of this paper to find unaddressed research gaps
Citations
疟原虫var基因转换速率变化导致抗原变异[英]/Paul H, Robert P, Christodoulou Z, et al//Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A
TL;DR: PfPMP1)与感染红细胞、树突状组胞以及胎盘的单个或多个受体作用,在黏附及免疫逃避中起关键的作�ly.
18.9K
An updated evolutionary classification of CRISPR–Cas systems
Kira S. Makarova,Yuri I. Wolf,Omer S. Alkhnbashi,Fabrizio Costa,Shiraz A. Shah,Sita J. Saunders,Rodolphe Barrangou,Stan J. J. Brouns,Emmanuelle Charpentier,Daniel H. Haft,Philippe Horvath,Sylvain Moineau,Francisco J. M. Mojica,Rebecca M. Terns,Michael P. Terns,Malcolm F. White,Alexander F. Yakunin,Roger A. Garrett,John van der Oost,Rolf Backofen,Eugene V. Koonin +20 more
TL;DR: An approach combining the analysis of signature protein families and features of the architecture of cas loci that unambiguously partitions most CRISPR–cas loci into distinct classes, types and subtypes is presented.
Global Organization and Proposed Megataxonomy of the Virus World
Eugene V. Koonin,Valerian V. Dolja,Mart Krupovic,Arvind Varsani,Arvind Varsani,Yuri I. Wolf,Natalya Yutin,F. Murilo Zerbini,Jens H. Kuhn +8 more
TL;DR: Phylogenetic analyses of virus hallmark genes combined with analyses of gene-sharing networks show that replication modules of five BCs evolved from a common ancestor that encoded an RNA-directed RNA polymerase or a reverse transcriptase, and propose a comprehensive hierarchical taxonomy of viruses.
526
Comparative genomics of defense systems in archaea and bacteria
TL;DR: The tight association of the genes encoding immunity systems and dormancy- or cell death-inducing defense systems in prokaryotic genomes suggests that these two major types of defense are functionally coupled, providing for effective protection at the population level.
Bacterial Genome Instability
Elise Darmon,David R. F. Leach +1 more
TL;DR: The specialized genetic elements and the endogenous processes that contribute to genome instability are described and the consequences of genome instability at the physiological level, and at the evolutionary level, where horizontal gene transfer has played an important role.
398
References
Prokaryote and eukaryote evolvability
TL;DR: It is suggested that unicellular organisms evolve largely through a process of metabolic change, resulting in biochemical diversity, not through extensive changes to cellular biochemistry, as in complex multicellular ones.
The evolutionary history of ribosomal protein RpS14:: horizontal gene transfer at the heart of the ribosome
TL;DR: This work aims to provide a systematic literature review and meta-analyses of the determinants of infectious disease in rats using a probabilistic approach and shows clear patterns of infection that are consistent with previous studies of canine coronavirus.
Prokaryotic evolution and the tree of life are two different things
William Martin,Tal Dagan,John Dupré,François-Joseph Lapointe,Laura Franklin-Hall,J. Peter Gogarten,Marc Ereshefsky,Robert G. Beiko,Maureen A. O’Malley,Eric Bapteste,Yan Boucher +10 more
- 01 Sep 2009
TL;DR: This article sets out alternative models to the tree of life to study prokaryote-eukaryote evolution, surmising that phylogeny opted for a single model as a holdover from the Modern Synthesis of evolution.
•Book
Lateral DNA transfer : mechanisms and consequences
Frederic D. Bushman
- 01 Jan 2002
TL;DR: This book discusses DNA and Lateral DNA Transfer in Eukaryotic Genomes: Fluidity in the Human Blueprint, a Transposon Progenitor of the Vertebrate Immune System, and the Evolutionary Implications Index.
Genomic anatomy of Escherichia coli O157:H7 outbreaks
TL;DR: A population genetic analysis of more than 200 related strains recovered from patients, contaminated produce, and zoonotic sources and should prove useful for the development of a refined phylogenomic framework for forensic, diagnostic, and epidemiological studies to define better risk in response to novel and emerging E. coli O157:H7 resistance and virulence phenotypes.