» Articles » PMID: 17483224

A Robust Species Tree for the Alphaproteobacteria

Overview
Journal J Bacteriol
Specialty Microbiology
Date 2007 May 8
PMID 17483224
Citations 135
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

The branching order and coherence of the alphaproteobacterial orders have not been well established, and not all studies have agreed that mitochondria arose from within the Rickettsiales. A species tree for 72 alphaproteobacteria was produced from a concatenation of alignments for 104 well-behaved protein families. Coherence was upheld for four of the five orders with current standing that were represented here by more than one species. However, the family Hyphomonadaceae was split from the other Rhodobacterales, forming an expanded group with Caulobacterales that also included Parvularcula. The three earliest-branching alphaproteobacterial orders were the Rickettsiales, followed by the Rhodospirillales and then the Sphingomonadales. The principal uncertainty is whether the expanded Caulobacterales group is more closely associated with the Rhodobacterales or the Rhizobiales. The mitochondrial branch was placed within the Rickettsiales as a sister to the combined Anaplasmataceae and Rickettsiaceae, all subtended by the Pelagibacter branch. Pelagibacter genes will serve as useful additions to the bacterial outgroup in future evolutionary studies of mitochondrial genes, including those that have transferred to the eukaryotic nucleus.

Citing Articles

Informatics-Driven Infectious Disease Research.

Sobral B, Mao C, Shukla M, Sullivan D, Zhang C Biomed Eng Syst Technol Int Jt Conf BIOSTEC Revis Sel Pap. 2025; 273:3-11.

PMID: 39995609 PMC: 11849688. DOI: 10.1007/978-3-642-29752-6_1.


The emerging view on the origin and early evolution of eukaryotic cells.

Vosseberg J, van Hooff J, Kostlbacher S, Panagiotou K, Tamarit D, Ettema T Nature. 2024; 633(8029):295-305.

PMID: 39261613 DOI: 10.1038/s41586-024-07677-6.


First insights into diversity and potential metabolic pathways of bacterial and fungal communities in the rhizosphere of L. (Papaveraceae) from the water-level-fluctuation zone of Wudongde Reservoir of the upper Yangtze river, China.

Zhou L, Wu S, Ma M Biodivers Data J. 2024; 11:e101950.

PMID: 38327346 PMC: 10848652. DOI: 10.3897/BDJ.11.e101950.


A Study of Sponge Symbionts from Different Light Habitats.

Cleary D, de Voogd N, Stuij T, Swierts T, Oliveira V, Polonia A Microb Ecol. 2023; 86(4):2819-2837.

PMID: 37597041 PMC: 10640470. DOI: 10.1007/s00248-023-02267-x.


Rhizobacterial compositions and their relationships with soil properties and medicinal bioactive ingredients in .

Li L, Yang X, Tong B, Wang D, Tian X, Liu J Front Microbiol. 2023; 14:1078886.

PMID: 36876061 PMC: 9978227. DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2023.1078886.


References
1.
Gray M, Lang B, Burger G . Mitochondria of protists. Annu Rev Genet. 2004; 38:477-524. DOI: 10.1146/annurev.genet.37.110801.142526. View

2.
Viollier P, Shapiro L . Spatial complexity of mechanisms controlling a bacterial cell cycle. Curr Opin Microbiol. 2004; 7(6):572-8. DOI: 10.1016/j.mib.2004.10.005. View

3.
Bapteste E, Susko E, Leigh J, MacLeod D, Charlebois R, Doolittle W . Do orthologous gene phylogenies really support tree-thinking?. BMC Evol Biol. 2005; 5:33. PMC: 1156881. DOI: 10.1186/1471-2148-5-33. View

4.
Gupta R . Protein signatures distinctive of alpha proteobacteria and its subgroups and a model for alpha-proteobacterial evolution. Crit Rev Microbiol. 2005; 31(2):101-35. DOI: 10.1080/10408410590922393. View

5.
Giovannoni S, Tripp H, Givan S, Podar M, Vergin K, Baptista D . Genome streamlining in a cosmopolitan oceanic bacterium. Science. 2005; 309(5738):1242-5. DOI: 10.1126/science.1114057. View