The not so universal tree of life or the place of viruses in the living world

被引:62
作者
Bruessow, Harald
机构
[1] La Tour de Peilz CH-1814
关键词
universal tree; viruses; phages; DNA VIRUSES; T4-TYPE BACTERIOPHAGES; PHAGE GENOMICS; CAPSID PROTEIN; CORE GENOME; EVOLUTION; REPLICATION; ORIGIN; SEQUENCE; GENES;
D O I
10.1098/rstb.2009.0036
中图分类号
Q [生物科学];
学科分类号
07 ; 0710 ; 09 ;
摘要
Darwin provided a great unifying theory for biology; its visual expression is the universal tree of life. The tree concept is challenged by the occurrence of horizontal gene transfer and-as summarized in this review-by the omission of viruses. Microbial ecologists have demonstrated that viruses are the most numerous biological entities on earth, outnumbering cells by a factor of 10. Viral genomics have revealed an unexpected size and distinctness of the viral DNA sequence space. Comparative genomics has shown elements of vertical evolution in some groups of viruses. Furthermore, structural biology has demonstrated links between viruses infecting the three domains of life pointing to a very ancient origin of viruses. However, presently viruses do not find a place on the universal tree of life, which is thus only a tree of cellular life. In view of the polythetic nature of current life definitions, viruses cannot be dismissed as non-living material. On earth we have therefore at least two large DNA sequence spaces, one represented by capsid-encoding viruses and another by ribosome-encoding cells. Despite their probable distinct evolutionary origin, both spheres were and are connected by intensive two-way gene transfers.
引用
收藏
页码:2263 / 2274
页数:12
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