Monophyly of Archaeplastida supergroup and relationships among its lineages in the light of phylogenetic and phylogenomic studies. Are we close to a consensus?
Monophyly of Archaeplastida supergroup and relationships among its lineages in the light of phylogenetic and phylogenomic studies. Are we close to a consensus?
One of the key evolutionary events on the scale of the biosphere was an endosymbiosis between a heterotrophic eukaryote
and a cyanobacterium, resulting in a primary plastid. Such an organelle is characteristic of three eukaryotic lineages,
glaucophytes, red algae and green plants. The three groups are usually united under the common name Archaeplastida or
Plantae in modern taxonomic classifications, which indicates they are considered monophyletic. The methods generally
used to verify this monophyly are phylogenetic analyses. In this article we review up-to-date results of such analyses and
discussed their inconsistencies. Although phylogenies of plastid genes suggest a single primary endosymbiosis, which is
assumed to mean a common origin of the Archaeplastida, different phylogenetic trees based on nuclear markers show
monophyly, paraphyly, polyphyly or unresolved topologies of Archaeplastida hosts. The difficulties in reconstructing host
cell relationships could result from stochastic and systematic biases in data sets, including different substitution rates and
patterns, gene paralogy and horizontal/endosymbiotic gene transfer into eukaryotic lineages, which attract Archaeplastida
in phylogenetic trees. Based on results to date, it is neither possible to confirm nor refute alternative evolutionary scenarios
to a single primary endosymbiosis. Nevertheless, if trees supporting monophyly are considered, relationships inferred
among Archaeplastida lineages can be discussed. Phylogenetic analyses based on nuclear genes clearly show the earlier
divergence of glaucophytes from red algae and green plants. Plastid genes suggest a more complicated history, but at least
some studies are congruent with this concept. Additional research involving more representatives of glaucophytes and
many understudied lineages of Eukaryota can improve inferring phylogenetic relationships related to the Archaeplastida.
In addition, alternative approaches not directly dependent on phylogenetic methods should be developed.
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