To probe the earliest evolutionary events attending the origin of the five known genome types (archaebacterial, eubacterial, nuclear, mitochondrial and plastid), we have analyzed sequences corresponding to a ubiquitous, highly conserved core of secondary structure in small subunit rRNA. Our results support (i) the existence of three primary lineages (archaebacterial, eubacterial, and nuclear), (ii) a specific eubacterial ancestry for plastids and mitochondria (plant, animal, fungal), and (iii) an eadosymbiotic, evolutionary origin of the two types of organelle from within distinct groups of eubacteria (blue-green algae (cyanobacteria) in the case of plastids, nonphotosynthetlc aerobic bacteria in the case of mitochondria). In addition, our analysis suggests (lv) a biphyletic origin of aitochondria, with animal and fungal mitochondria branching together but separately from plant aitochondria, and Cv) a monophyletic origin of plastids. The method described here provides a powerful and generally applicable molecular taxonomic approach towards a global phylogeny encompassing all organisms and organelles. © 1984 IRL Press Limited.
CITATION STYLE
Gray, M. W., Sankoff, D., & Cedergren, R. J. (1984). On the evolutionary descent of organisms and organelles: A global phylogeny based on a highly conserved structural core in small subunit ribosomal RNA. Nucleic Acids Research, 12(14), 5837–5852. https://doi.org/10.1093/nar/12.14.5837
Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.