Molecular phylogeny: pitfalls and progress

Autores/as

  • David Moreira UPRES-A 8080, Equipe Phylogénie et Evolution Moléculaires, Université Paris-Sud, France
  • Hervé Philippe UPRES-A 8080, Equipe Phylogénie et Evolution Moléculaires, Université Paris-Sud, France

Palabras clave:

phylogeny, classification, long branch attraction, rRNA trees, sequence analysis

Resumen

Molecular phylogeny based on nucleotide or amino acid sequence comparison has become a widespread tool for general taxonomy and evolutionary analyses. It seems the only means to establish a natural classification of microorganisms, since their phenotypic traits are not always consistent with genealogy. After an optimistic period during which comprehensive microbial evolutionary pictures appeared, the discovery of several pitfalls affecting molecular phylogenetic reconstruction challenged the general validity of this approach. In addition to biological factors, such as horizontal gene transfer, some methodological problems may produce misleading phylogenies. They are essentially (i) loss of phylogenetic signal by the accumulation of overlapping mutations, (ii) incongruity between the real evolutionary process and the assumed models of sequence evolution, and (iii) differences of evolutionary rates among species or among positions within a sequence. Here, we discuss these problems and some strategies proposed to overcome their effects.

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Publicado

2010-03-15

Número

Sección

Review Articles