Title: Phylogeny and Systematics
1Phylogeny and Systematics
- Barbara Musolf
- Clayton State University
- AS Building G 110-G
- 678-466-4851
2Objectives
- What is the basis for phylogenies?
- How does phylogeny link Linnaean classification
with evolutionary history? - How are phylogenetic trees constructed?
- How is molecular biology used to determine
ancestries and evolutionary history?
3Tree of Life Website
- Don't draw conclusions about the relative
diversity of different groups of organisms. - Don't interpret relative branch lengths as
indicators of levels of evolutionary
"advancement". - No organism alive today represents the ancestor
of any other living creature.
4Phylogeny genesis of the tribe
- Phylogeny seeks to determine the origin and
history of species. - The search for this history leads biologists to
draw on the fossil record to seek a species
ancestor. - Systematics is the analytical tool used to
examine morphological and molecular resemblances.
5The basis for phylogenies fossils
- Fossils provide an incomplete but historical
record . - Fossils favor organisms that
- Existed for a long time
- Were abundant and widespread
- Had a hard skeleton or shell that enabled them to
be formed into fossils
6Origin of fossils in sandstone
Rivers carry sediment to the ocean.
Sedimentary rock layers containing fossils form
on the ocean floor.
Over time, new strata are deposited,
containing fossils from each time period.
As sea levels change and the seafloor is
pushed upward, sedimentary rocks are exposed.
Erosion reveals strata and fossils.
Younger stratum with more recent fossils
Older stratum with older fossils
7The basis for phylogenies morphological and
molecular homologies
- Morphological evidence Homologous structures
strongly suggest descent from a common ancestor. - Ex. Forelimbs of mammals
- Molecular homologies are a more reliable
indicator of relatedness. - Organisms that share homologous DNA but share
little morphological homology - Ex. Hawaiian silversword plants
8Homology vs Analogy
- Analogy is similarity caused by convergent
evolution. - The more points of resemblance between two
species the more likely they are homologous.
Australian mole
North American mole
9Molecular homologies
1
2
- Beginning of divergence
- Mutations
- Lack of alignment
- Realignment using a computer program
Deletion
1
2
Insertion
1
2
1
2
10Molecular homoplasy
- This sequence of two organisms indicates they
share 25 of their bases. - Mathematical tools suggest this is a coincidence
rather than homology.
11Linnaeus classification
- Linnaeus classification placed organisms into
categories - Used similarities and differences to sort
categories. - Introduced binomial nomenclature (genus and
species) to identify organisms. - Species name was unique for the organism
- Panthera pardus
- We still use Linnaeuss classification and
binomial nomenclatureHomo sapiens
12Hierarchical Classification
Panthera pardus
Species
Panthera
Genus
- Linnaeus established broad categories that fit
into a hierarchy.
Felidae
Family
Carnivora
Order
Mammalia
Class
Chordata
Phylum
Animalia
Kingdom
Eukarya
Animation Classification Schemes
Domain
13Binomial nomenclature
- Each organism is referred to using both genus and
the species epithet - Both genus and species are italicized and genus
is capitalizedPanthera pardus - The species name is always latinized.
- Ex Loriculus sclateri is a bird that was named
by Wallace after a scientist named Sclater.
14Phylogenetic trees
Leopard
Domestic cat
Common ancestor
Leopard
Domestic cat
Wolf
Common ancestor
15Phylogeny and classification
- Phylogeny shows the nesting of groups within more
inclusive groups. - Nodes lead to two-way branch points or
dichotomies. - Branches that are further removed from the root
show greater divergence from the root or
ancestor. - Darwin co-opted Linnaeuss classification because
it could show evolutionary relationships. - Our classifications will come to be, as far as
they can be so made, geneaologies.
16Species
Panthera pardus (leopard)
Mephitis mephitis (striped skunk)
Lutra lutra (European otter)
Canis familiaris (domestic dog)
Canis lupus (wolf)
Genus
Panthera
Mephitis
Lutra
Canis
Family
Felidae
Mustelidae
Canidae
Order
Carnivora
17Phylogenetic systematics
- A clade is made up of an ancestral species and
its descendents. - Valid clades are monophyletic.
- Incomplete clades
- Paraphyletic clades lack some of the descendents
- Polyphyletic clades lack the ancestor
18Grouping 1
Monophyletic
19Grouping 2
Paraphyletic
20LE 25-10c
Grouping 3
Polyphyletic
21Shared primitive vs shared derived characteristics
- Shared primitive characteristics are those shared
beyond the taxon that is being defined. - Example is the backbone in mammals
- Shared derived characteristics are unique to a
clade. - Example is presence of hair for thermoregulation
in mammals. - Outgroups are used to differentiate between
shared primitive and shared derived
characteristics.
22Taxon vs clade
- Taxon is a designated group of species
- Examples humans, primates, mammals, vertebrates
- Clade is a taxon that includes all the
evolutionary descendents of a common ancestor. - Two clades that are each others closest
relatives are sister clades - Sister species are two species that are closest
relatives
23Character table
LE 25-11
TAXA
Lancelet (outgroup)
Salamander
Lamprey
Leopard
Turtle
Tuna
Hair
Amniotic (shelled) egg
Four walking legs
CHARACTERS
Hinged jaws
Vertebral column (backbone)
Character table
24Cladogram
Leopard
Turtle
Hair
Salamander
Amniotic egg
Tuna
Four walking legs
Lamprey
Hinged jaws
Lancelet (outgroup)
Vertebral column
Cladogram
25Phylogram
LE 25-12
Drosophila
Fish
Lancelet
Amphibian
- Length of the branch reflects number of changes
in a particular DNA sequencehedgehog gene
Rat
Bird
Human
Mouse
outgroup
26Ultrametric tree
Drosophila
Bird
Rat
Mouse
Lancelet
Fish
Human
Amphibian
Cenozoic
- Branches show time.
- Branches are of equal length for all organisms
from the ancestor to the present
65.5
Mesozoic
251
Paleozoic
542
Neoproterozoic
Millions of years ago
27How to assemble a phylogenetic tree
- Principle of maximum parsimony
- If assembling a tree based on morphology choose
the tree that requires the fewest evolutionary
events - If assembling a tree based on DNA sequences
choose the one that requires the fewest base
changes - Principle of maximum likelihood
- Given rules that govern DNA changes, a tree can
be assembled that reflects evolutionary events.
28LE 25-14
Human
Mushroom
Tulip
0
30
40
Human
0
40
Mushroom
0
Tulip
Percentage differences between sequences
25
15
15
20
15
10
5
5
Tree 1 More likely
Tree 2 Less likely
Comparison of possible trees
29Maximum likelihood decisions
- Computer programs take the DNA evidence and
follow the two principles. - Distance methods minimize the total of all the
percentage differences. - Complex character-state methods minimize total
number of base changes or search for the mostly
likely base changes among all sequences.
30Application of parsimony Fig 25.15
31Phylogenetic tree as hypotheses
- Presents an hypothesis that shows the
relationship between different organisms. - The best hypothesis is the one that best fits all
the available data. - Phylogenetic hypotheses have often been revised
or rejected when new information becomes
available.
32LE 25-16
Lizard
Bird
Mammal
Four-chambered heart
Mammal-bird clade
Lizard
Bird
Mammal
Four-chambered heart
Four-chambered heart
Lizard-bird clade
33Evolutionary history in the genome
- Molecular systematics enables scientists to
- Compare groups that have little in common.
- Used to help Carl Woese discover the Archea
domain - Study genetic divergence within a species
- Study organisms that left no fossil record.
- Investigate relationships between taxa that
diverged hundreds of million years ago - Study of rRNA sequences show that fungi are more
closely related to animals than green plants. - Explore recent evolutionary events such as human
migrations.
34Gene families
- Gene duplication is an important gene mutation.
- Duplicated genes form families within an
organisms genome. - Two types of homologous genes
- Orthologous genes are passed in a straight line
through generations but are found in different
gene pools because of speciation. - Paralogous genes are duplicated genes in the
genome
35Orthologous and Paralogous genes
LE 25-17a
Ancestral gene
LE 25-17b
Speciation
Orthologous genes
Ancestral gene
Gene duplication
Paralogous genes
36Genomic evolution
- Orthologous genes are widespread and ubiquitous.
- The number of genes has not increased at the same
rate as phenotypic complexity. - Humans have only 5X as many genes as yeast.
- Human genes are more versatile than yeast and can
carry out many more functions.
37Molecular measurements of time
- Measurement of time assumes that some genes and
regions of the genome evolve at a constant rate. - Focus on nucleotide substitutions
- Calibrate the measurement by graphing the number
of nucleotide substitutions against a known
series of evolutionary branch points - Many of the changes are neutral and produce no
effect on fitness. - Harmful mutations are removed from the genetic
pool. - Molecular measurements are unreliable beyond the
fossil record.
38Tree of Life
- Last common ancestor of living things.
- Fusion of bacteria and arachea to produce
Eukaryotes? - Symbiosis of mitochondria and eukaryote ancestors
- Symbiosis of chloropast with plant ancestor