BMC Evolutionary Biology BioMed Central BMC 1 2001, Evolutionary Biology

Background The microsatellite, (GATA)n has been frequently used for DNA fingerprinting. However, very few attempts have been made to analyze (GATA)n-containing loci in rice. Results Three polymorphic (GATA)n-harboring loci viz. OS1A6, OS1H10 and OS2E7, containing 7–13 repeat motifs were identified from a genomic library of a cultivated rice, Oryza sativa var. Basmati-370 using oligonucleotide probe (GATA)4. When (GATA)n flanking primers were used to screen 26 wilds (representing different genomes of rice), 16 cultivars, 47 Indian elite rice varieties and 37 lines resistant/susceptible to bacterial blight, up to 22 alleles were obtained at an individual locus. Also, interestingly the bacterial blight resistant lines clustered into a separate group from the remaining rice genotypes, when a dendrogram was constructed based on the polymorphism obtained at the three loci. This may be due to the partial homology of the clones OS1H10 and OS2E7 to regions encoding O. longistaminata receptor kinase-like protein and pathogenesis-related protein. The ability of these O. sativa flanking primers to amplify DNA of maize, wheat, barley and oat indicates that these (GATA)n-containing loci are conserved across different cereal genera. Conclusions The large allele number obtained reveals the potential of (GATA)n-containing loci as powerful tools to detect simple sequence length polymorphism (SSLP). The (GATA)n-flanking primers were not only useful in distinguishing between closely related genotypes, but could also be used for cross-species amplification and are also conserved across different cereal genera. These loci could also cluster the bacterial blight resistant/susceptible lines into different groups based on the resistance genes present in them.


Background
The determination of multiple, complete genome sequences of bacteria, archaea and eukaryotes has created the opportunity for a new level of phylogenetic analysis that is based not on a phylogenetic tree for selected molecules, for example, rRNAs, as in traditional molecular phylogenetic studies [1,2], but (ideally) on the entire body of information contained in the genomes. The most straightforward version of this type of analysis, to which we hereinafter refer to as 'genome-tree' building, involves scaling-up the traditional tree-building approach and analyzing the phylogenetic trees for multiple gene families (in principle, all families represented in many genomes), in an attempt to derive a consensus, 'organismal' phylogeny [3][4][5]. However, because of the wide spread of horizontal gene transfer and lineage-specific gene loss, at least in the prokaryotic world, comparison of trees for different families and consensus derivation may become highly problematic [6,7]. Probably due to all these problems, a pessimistic conclusion has been reached that prokaryotic phylogeny might not be reconstructable from protein sequences, at least with current phylogenetic methods [4].
With the complete genome sequences at hand, it appears natural to seek for alternatives to traditional, alignmentbased tree-building in the form of integral characteristics of the evolutionary process. Probably the most obvious of such characteristics is the presence-absence of representatives of the analyzed species in orthologous groups of genes, and recently, at least three groups have employed this approach to build genome trees, primarily for prokaryotes [8][9][10]. An alternative way to construct a genome tree involves using the mean or median level of similarity among all detectable pairs of orthologs as the measure of the evolutionary distance between species [11]. Yet another possibility involves building species trees by comparing gene orders. This approach had been pioneered in the classical work of Dobzhansky and Sturtevant who used inversions in Drosophila chromosomes to construct an evolutionary tree [12]. Subsequently, mathematical methods have been developed to calculate rearrangement distances between genomes, and, using these, phylogenetic trees have been built for certain small genomes, such as plant mitochondria and herpesviruses [13,14]. These approaches, however, are applicable only to genomes that show significant conservation of global gene order, which is manifestly not the case among prokaryotes [15][16][17]. Even relatively close species such as, for example, Escherichia coli and Haemophilus influenzae, two species of the γ-subdivision of Proteobacteria, retain very little conservation of gene order beyond the operon level (typically, two-to-four genes in a row), and essentially none is detectable among evolutionarily distant bacteria and ar chaea [15,16,18]. Very few operons, primarily those coding for physically interacting subunits of multiprotein complexes such as certain ribosomal proteins or RNA-polymerase subunits, are conserved across a wide range of prokaryotic lineages [15,16]. On the other hand, pairwise comparisons of even distantly related prokaryotic genomes reveal considerable number of shared (predicted) operons, which creates an opportunity for a meaningful comparative analysis [19] [20,21].
The critical issue with all these approaches to genome tree building is to what extent each of them reflects phylogeny and to what extent they are affected by other evolutionary processes, such as lineage-specific gene loss and horizontal gene transfer. Comparative analyses have strongly suggested that these phenomena make major contributions to genome evolution, at least in prokaryotes [7,[22][23][24][25]. These phenomena have the potential to severely affecting phylogenetic tree topology, particularly when similar sets of genes are lost indifferent lineages because of similar environmental pressures, or when a preferential trend of horizontal gene flow exists between different lineages. The possibility even has been discussed that the amount of lateral gene exchange is such that it invalidates the very principle of representing the evolution of species as a tree; instead, the only adequate representation of evolutionary history could be a complex network [6][25]. Genome-trees seem to be the last resort for the species tree concept. Unless phylogenetic signal can be revealed by at least some approaches based on genome-wide comparisons, the conclusion seems imminent that this concept should be abandoned and replaced by a more complex representation of evolution.
Here, we compare the topologies produced with five, largely independent approaches to genome-tree building: i) presence-absence of genomes in Clusters of Orthologous Groups of proteins (COGs); ii) conservation of local gene order (pairs of adjacent genes) among prokaryotic genomes; iii) distribution of percent identity between apparent orthologs; iv) sequence conservation in concatenated alignments of ribosomal proteins; v) comparative analysis of multiple trees reconstructed for representative protein families. We find that, while the presence-absence approach is most heavily affected by gene loss and horizontal transfer, the other four methods reveal stronger phylogenetic signals. Although the topologies of the trees constructed with different approaches were only partially compatible, three previously unnoticed high-level clades among bacteria were revealed with notable consistency. We suggest that, in spite of all the complexity brought about by horizontal gene transfer and lineage-specific gene loss, these groups reflect certain evolutionary reality, i.e. the trajectory of evolution for a relatively stable gene core. It appears that this is the only meaningful way to treat the notion of a species tree: as the history of a relatively large ensemble of genes, not a comprehensive representation of the history of entire genomes.

New criteria for genome-tree construction
To our knowledge, conserved gene pairs and distributions of identity level between orthologs have not been used previously as the basis for phylogenetic tree construction. Therefore we start by describing the relevant results of prokaryotic genome comparison in somewhat greater detail.

Conserved gene pairs in prokaryotic genomes
The results of the present analysis of conserved gene pairs are consistent with the notion of the fluidity of prokaryotic gene order caused by extensive recombination. Only 17 invariant genes pairs were detected, all of which consists of genes for ribosomal proteins and RNA polymerase subunits. The remaining 4586 gene pairs were missing in at least one genome. The number of gene pairs represented in three, four and a greater number of genomes decayed rapidly, with highly conserved pairs forming the tail of the distribution (Fig. 1). The 95% quantile of this distribution (excluding the highly conserved pairs) was found to fit the geometric model with a high statistical significance (Fig. 1). This is compatible with random, independent loss of gene pairs during evolution suggesting that, with the caveat of horizontal transfer, the number of gene pairs shared by three genomes could reflect the evolutionary distance between them.
The number of conserved gene pairs present in individual prokaryotic genomes varied from 208 for M. genitalium to 2314 for P. aeruginosa (Table 1). Analysis of the co-occurrence of gene pairs among the prokaryotic genomes shows high values of the Jaquard coefficient, which reflect partial conservation of gene order (see legend to Table 1), for closely related species, for example, 0.32 for E. coli and H. influenzae and 0.35 for M. thermoautotrophicum and M. jannaschi (Table 1). The value of this coefficient varied from 0.16 to 0.66, with a mean of 0.26, for archaea, and from 0.04 to 0.87, with a mean of 0.16, for bacteria. In contrast, for archaeal-bacterial comparisons, the values varied from 0.04 to 0.18, with the average of 0.08 (Table 1). These observations appear to indicate that the distribution of conserved gene pairs among prokaryotic genomes carries a phylogenetic signal. Figure 2 shows a sampling of the distributions of identity percentage between pairs of apparent orthologs identified as reciprocal best hits from a range of genome pairs separated by varying phylogenetic distances. Most of the distributions are clearly unimodal, and the distributions for pairs of phylogenetically distant genomes, such as those from different major bacterial lineages or bacteria versus archaea, have their modes within a relatively narrow range around 33% identity ( Figure 2).

Distributions of identity percentage between probable orthologs from complete prokaryotic genomes
The use of reciprocal best hits is a conservative way to identify the set of probable orthologs between pairs of genomes because some of the orthologs are missed due to complex relationships between groups of paralogs. Nevertheless, all genome-to-genome comparisons included at least 100 (for the smallest genomes such as the mycoplasmas), and typically, a considerably greater number of protein pairs ( [11] and data not shown). This suggests that parameters of the distributions of the similarity level between probable orthologs identified in this fashion could potentially serve as useful measures of the evolutionary distance between genomes.

Genome trees constructed with three different approaches
Genome trees were generated using the approaches described under Material and Methods. All the trees showed a clear separation of the two major prokaryotic domains, Bacteria and Archaea (Fig. 3,4,5). Several terminal bifurcations that reflect clustering of relatively close species, such as three mycoplasmas (M. genitalium, M. pneumoniae and U. urealiticum), two spirochetes (B. burgdorferi and T. pallidum), and H. pylori and C. jejuni, are also reproduced in all trees (Fig. 3,4,5). This retention of both the deepest and the terminal branchings shows that all types of data used for tree con-   The diagonal (bold) shows the total number of conserved gene pairs in each genome. The upper triangle of the matrix shows the raw number of gene pairs shared by each pair of genomes and the lower triangle shows the value of 100 * O ij ; O ij is the Jaquard coefficient calculated as Q ij = C ij /(N i +N j -C ij ) where C ij is the number of gene pairs shared by genomes i and j, and N i and N j are the total numbers of conserved gene pairs in genome pairs in genomes i and j, respectively [51].
struction contained at least a crude phylogenetic signal. However, beyond these obvious aspects of topology, and in particular with respect to clustering of distantly related bacteria and archaea, the trees produced with different approaches showed significant differences, which appear to reflect the relative contributions of phenotypic and phylogenetic signals. A quantitative comparison of the tree topologies using the symmetric distance method showed that the presence-absence tree was most different from the trees made by the other methods (Table 2).

Presence-absence of genomes in COGs
The topology of the parsimony tree built using this criterion appears to reflect primarily the phenotypes of the respective organisms (Fig. 3). This is most clearly manifest in the two major bacterial clusters that appear in this tree, each with a strong bootstrap support: i) bacteria with large genomes, namely E. coli, B. subtilis, Synechocystis sp., Deinococcus radiodurans and Mycobacterium tuberculosis, and free-living bacteria with small genomes, A. aeolicus and T. maritima ii) parasites with small genomes (mycoplasmas, spirochetes, chlamydia and rickettsia) Parasites with moderate-sized genomes (H. influenzae, N. meningitidis, and P. multocida; H. pylori and C. jejuni) formed two distinct groups. Thus, well-established phylogenetic relationships between free-living and parasitic bacteria, such as those within the Proteobacteria (E. coli-H. influenzae-P. multocida-N. meningitidis) and within low-GC Gram-positive bacteria (B. subtilis-mycoplasmas), are not reflected accurately in this tree topology. The two free-living bacteria with small genomes, the hyperthermophiles A. aeolicus and T. maritima, did not join either the free-living or the parasitic bacterial cluster, despite their small number of genes similar to that in bacterial parasites (Fig. 3). That these bacteria do not group with the parasites despite similar genome sizes, suggests that it is not the number of genes per se, but rather the degree of genome degradation and the loss of coherent sets of genes that affect the topology of the presence-absence tree. The inclusion of the parasites M. tuberculosis and Pseudomonas aeruginosa in the cluster of bacteria with large genomes probably reflects the recent origin of parasitism in these lineages. It is further notable that, in this tree, the two representative of Crenarchaeota (A. pernix and S. solfataricus) do not comprise a sister group of the Euryarchaeota (the remaining archaeal species), but rather for am branch within the Euryarchaeal cluster (see discussion below).
In previous studies that employed similar approaches to genome-tree building, phylogenetically reasonable clades were observed after a simple omission of parasitic species [8,9]. Such an operation could be applied to the tree shown in Fig. 3, indeed resulting in the correct recovery of the proteobacterial and Gram-positive bacteri- al lineages. However, it seems that, because known natural groups could be reproduced by this approach only after omission of certain species on the basis of independent prior knowledge, this method hardly can be useful for delineating new, phylogenetically sound clades.

Conserved gene pairs
The topology of the tree based on gene pair conservation seems to carry a stronger phylogenetic signal than the gene presence-absence tree because it correctly groups together related free-living and parasitic bacteria despite major differences in gene repertoires (Fig. 4). The bacterial side of this tree consists of three major clades: i) proteobacterial clade that, in addition to bona fide Proteobacteria, includes also A. aeolicus, M. tuberculosis, D. radiodurans, and Synechocystis sp, ii) Gram-positive clade that additionally includes T. maritima, and iii) an unexpected clade that unites spirochetes and chlamydia. In the archaeal domain, the two species of the Crenarchaeota did not form a clade, but instead were present as separate branches interspersed with euryarchaeal species. To further assess the robustness of the obtained tree, we varied the parameters of the included conserved pairs by allowing distances between the genes comprising a pair from 0 to 5 and changing the minimal number of genomes, in which a conserved gene pair had to be present, from 2 to 4. These changes did not significantly affect the tree topology (data not shown). The topology of a neighbor-joining tree constructed by using the number of gene pairs shared by two genomes to cal-culate the evolutionary distance between them was similar to the topology of the maximum parsimony tree ( Table 2 and data not shown).
At least some unusual aspects of this tree's the topology could be explained by horizontal transfer of operons between particular bacterial and archaeal lineages. Specifically, it has been noticed previously that T. maritima shares a considerable number of genes and operons with Gram-positive bacteria, to the exclusion of other bacteria [21]; this seems to be compatible with the position of T. maritima with the Gram-positive cluster. Similarly, considerable horizontal gene transfer appear to have occurred between the Sulfolobus and Thermoplasma lineages, which cluster together in the archaeal part of this tree. The presence of extra species in the proteobacterial cluster is more surprising because no obvious trend for operon transfer between these bacteria and bona fide Proteobacteria has been noticed during systematic genome comparisons; however, a considerable Distance tree constructed using the median of the percent identity distribution between probable orthologs for evolutionary distance calculation. An Evalue cut-off of 0.001 was used to identify bidirectional best hits between proteins encoded in all pairs of genomes. Distances were calculated using the logarithmic formula. The designations are as in Fig. 3.
number of shared gene pairs was detected during the present analysis (Table 1). Artifacts of tree construction could also contribute to these associations. In contrast, the spirochete-chlamydia clade might reflect a deep phylogenetic relationship (see discussion below).

Parameters of percent identity distributions between orthologs
Different characteristics of the distributions of percent identity between the probable orthologs, such as the mean, the median, the mode and various quantiles, were used to calculate distances between genomes and construct phylogenetic trees. Trees built with different cutoff values for symmetrical best hits, four different formulas for the evolutionary distance calculation (see Materials and Methods) and different parameters of the distributions showed essentially the same topology, with strong bootstrap support for most of the clades ( Fig. 5 and data not shown). The complete proteobacterial and Gram-positive bacterial clusters were recovered in this tree as well as the unexpected grouping of chlamydia with spirochete noticed above in the tree based on conserved gene pairs (Fig. 4,5). Also similarly to the previous two trees, the Crenarchaea grouped with Thermoplasma within the archaeal part of the tree. Beyond these groupings, the tree appeared conservative in the sense that the unassigned bacterial species formed separate branches near the root of the bacterial subtree. The closest to the root were the two hyperthermophilic species, A. aeolicus and T. maritima, which is compatible with the standard view of their phylogenetic position [1,26].

Alignment-based approaches to the construction of a species tree
The above three approaches involve construction of genome trees "par excellence", i.e. based on integral characteristics of genomes (or, more precisely, gene sets) that are not directly related to more traditional, alignmentbased measures, which are usually employed for calculating evolutionary distances or for parsimony analysis. These genome tree raise several interesting phylogenetic questions, for example, do spirochetes and chlamydia indeed share a common ancestor, and are Euryarchaeota, in fact, a paraphyletic group with respect to the Crenarchaeota. However, the reliability of the conclusions drawn from the topology of these trees remains uncertain. Therefore we decided to complement these genome-oriented approaches with more traditional ones applied on a large scale.

Concatenated alignments of ribosomal proteins
The alignments of the 32 ribosomal proteins conserved in all bacterial and archaeal species were concatenated head-to-tail and treated as a single alignment containing 4821 columns. The underlying assumption is that the genes coding for ribosomal proteins that function as components of a large macromolecular complex are unlikely to undergo horizontal transfer, which tends to confound comparisons of the tree topologies for other protein families and would invalidate the concatenation approach. The resulting maximum-likelihood tree contains the complete proteobacterial and Gram-positive bacterial clusters as well as the spirochete-chlamydia cluster noticed in the genome-trees. In addition to the spirochetes-chlamydia clade, the following non-trivial affinities were detected with strong bootstrap support: i) a cluster of the two hyperthemophiles, A. aeolicus and T. maritima, ii) a cluster including D. radiodurans, Synechocystis, and M. tuberculosis, which, at a deeper level, joined the Gram-positive bacterial branch (Fig. 6). Similar tree topologies were obtained when the ribosomal protein data were analyzed using the neighbor-joining method and when bacterial phylogeny was analyzed separately by using a concatenated alignments of 51 ribosomal proteins shared by all bacteria (data not shown).
Notably, in the quantitative comparison of tree topologies, the tree made of concatenated ribosomal protein alignments showed the closest similarity to the genometree based on the distributions of percent identity between orthologs (Table 2). The reliability of the observed non-trivial groupings was further examined by using a maximum likelihood approach (the Kishino-Hasegawa test). For each clade (usually, species) forming the group to be tested, trees with alternative topologies were manually constructed by joining the clade in question to every other major group in the tree. For example, to assess the support for the spirochetes-chlamydia grouping, spirochetes were placed, sequentially, with Thermotoga, Aquifex, the Thermotoga-Aquifex branch, ε-proteobacteria, the αβγproteobacterial branch, Proteobacteria, the Deinococcus-Synechocystis-Mycobacterium cluster, the low G+C Gram-positive cluster, the branch that unites the latter two clusters, and between bacteria and archaea (to the bacterial root). The same alternatives were tested for chlamydia. Alternative topologies were compared either directly, using the ProtML program, or were subjected to local rearrangement first. In cases when the topology did not revert to the original one, the final, "optimized" topology was used for the comparison. These tests showed high stability of the Thermotoga-Aquifex and Deinococcus-Synechocystis-Mycobacterium groupings (no competing topologies with likelihood within 1 SD unit from the original; Fig. 7,8, Table 3,4,5,6). The affinity of the Deinococcus-Synechocystis-Mycobacterium with Gram-positive bacteria also was supported, although an alternative topology, with this cluster joining Proteobac-teria could not be ruled out (Fig. 9, Table 7). Assessment of the spirochete-chlamydia grouping revealed two competing topologies, albeit unusual ones. Specifically, moving ε-proteobacteria from the proteobacterial branch to the spirochete branch or, alternatively, moving spirochetes with ε-p roteobacteria and simultaneously moving chlamydia to the bacterial root results in statistically

Figure 7
The Kishino-Hasegawa test for the Aquifex-Thermotoga clade. "1" indicates the original position of the tested clade in the concatenated ribosomal proteins tree (Fig. 6). The remaining numbers show the alternative positions tested for each of these species (in green ovals for Aquifex and blue for Thermotoga). For the likelihood values and RELL bootstrap values for each of the corresponding topologies, see Table 3A.  Table 8, 9). Also, a minor rearrangement of the topology within the euryarchaeal branch allowed for a reasonable alternative to the topology in Fig. 8 (euryarchaeal paraphyly), with the Crenarchaea-Euryarchaea radiation at the archaeal root (Fig.  11, Table 10).

A census of protein families
Another approach to the "species tree" problem involves analysis of phylogenetic trees for as many individual protein families as possible, in an attempt to identify a prevailing topology or at least common phylogenetic patterns. A survey of the COG data set identified 132 COGs, each of which included a large number of bacterial

Figure 8
The Kishino-Hasegawa test for the Deinococcus-Mycobacterium-Synechocystis clade. The identical scheme of producing alternative topologies was used for each of the three species. For example for Deinococcus (see Table 4) the green ovals (## 2 to 13) indicate alternative placements of Deinococcus with Mycobacterium and Synechocystis occupying the original position and the blue ovals (## 14 to 25) indicate alternative placements of the Mycobacterium-Synechocystis pair with Deinococcus left in the original position. The same was done with Mycobacterium versus Deinococcus-Synechocystis pair (Table 5) and Synechocystis versus Deinococcus-Mycobacterium pair ( Table 6).  Table 7. and archaeal species, but no or few paralogs and thus appeared to be amenable to a large-scale phylogenetic analysis (Table 11). Maximum-likelihood trees were constructed for each of these COGs, and a breakdown of nearest neighbors was derived for species and groups involved in each of the non-trivial or questionable branchings discussed above (Crenarchaea, Thermotoga, Aquifex, Deinococcus, Mycobacterium, Synechocystis, spirochetes, chlamydia, and ε-proteobacteria). In each case, a wide spread of topologies was observed, but the grouping that is observed in the concatenated ribosomal proteins tree was encountered most often, although, for example, for the spirochete-chlamydia cluster, the lead over other topologies was slim (Fig. 13,14,15).

Discussion and Conclusions
The trees constructed with each of the four approaches employed here reflect both the phylogenetic signal and the phenotypic (life style) similarities or differences between organisms, but the relative contributions of these

Figure 11
The Kishino-Hasegawa test for the unification of εproteobacteria with the rest of Proteobacteria. See Table 9.   two types of information appear to differ substantially. The gene presence-absence analysis seemed to be dominated by the phenotypic signal, primarily that from gene loss. The tree based on conserved gene pairs appeared to combine phylogenetic information with major effects of horizontal transfer of operons. In contrast, the trees based on the distributions of the identity level of orthologs appear to be more meaningful phylogenetically as indicated by the recovery of established high-level phylogenetic groups of bacteria, such as Proteobacteria and Gram-positive bacteria. The ability to correctly identify these major bacterial subdivisions and the absence of obviously wrong groupings confer credibility to non-trivial clades present in these trees, in particular the spirochete-chlamydia clade. The same logic applied to the tree made of concatenated ribosomal protein sequences,     which included two other non-trivial bacterial groupings, Aquifex-Thermotoga and Synechocystis-Mycobacterium-Deinococcus, the latter joining the Grampositive branch. Furthermore, extensive testing of alternative topologies using the Kishino-Hasegawa test largely supported these new bacterial branches. The nature of this support becomes clearer when one examines the re-sults of the protein family census. Each of the potential new clades was indeed most common among the observed topologies, but in no case, was the excess of this topology overwhelming. Taken together, these results seem to shed light on the very notion of a "species tree". It appears that, at best, a species tree can be viewed as a     prevailing phylogenetic trend, which, as far as deep branchings are concerned, may not even apply to a majority of the genes in a genome.
The potential new, deep relationships between bacterial lineages revealed during this analysis should be considered preliminary and treated with caution. Nevertheless, an evolutionary affinity between Cyanobacteria (Synechocystis) and Actinomycetes (Mycobacterium) appears plausible, particularly given the presence, in these bacterial groups, of well-developed and partly similar signal transduction systems [27]. The connection between two hyperthermophilic bacteria, Aquifex and Thermotoga, also has obvious biological meaning, although, in this case, particular caution is due, given the possibility of preferential horizontal gene exchange between these organisms that inhabit similar environments. However, the strong support for this grouping obtained in the analysis of concatenated ribosomal proteins argues against horizontal transfer as the primary cause for the observed topology. Although recent studies on the phylogeny of ribosomal proteins suggest some horizontal transfer events, these seem to be largely restricted to bacteria-specific ribosomal proteins. In the universal set of ribosomal proteins, only one, S14, showed clear signs of horizontal transfer [28]. The potential deep phylogenetic connections uncovered during this analysis call for detailed genome comparisons in search of potential shared derived characters, such as unique protein domain architectures, that could support the new clades.  . Therefore it seems likely that the Firmicutes clade, at least in its present composition, does not exist.
The new clade that might replace it consists of low-GC Gram-positive bacteria and the potential Actinomycetes-Deinococcales-Cyanobacteria group (Fig. 6). All methods of tree analysis applied here also challenge the traditional division of the archaeal kingdom into Euryarchaeota and Crenarchaeota, suggesting instead that Euryarchaeota could be a paraphyletic group with respect to Crenarchaeota, or in other words, that Crenarchaeota might have evolved from within the Euryarchaeota. However, the existence of a statis tically supported alternative topology, with a sister-group relationship between Euryarchaeota and Crenarchaeota allows for the possibility that the apparent paraphyly of Euryarchaea is an artifact caused by rapid evolution in some Euryarchaeal lineages, such as Halobacterium and Thermoplasma.
An independent phylogenetic study of concatenated ribosomal proteins has been recently published [32]. The main specific conclusion reported in this study was the apparent association of Synechocystis with Gram-positive bacteria, although instability of the tree topology de-

Figure 12
The Kishino-Hasegawa test for position of Crenarchaeota with respect to Euryarchaeota. Position of Crenarchaeota with respect to Euryarchaeota (1) -the maximum-likelihood tree topology; (2) -the competing topology with Crenarchaeota and Euryarchaeota as sister groups. See Table 10 Figure 13 A census of the topologies of maximum-likelihood trees for individual protein families. Thermotoga and Aquifex. In each panel, the left top icon shows the grouping tested and the remaining icons show the most common alternative topologies for the given species/group. Dotted lines indicate optional presence of (possibly several) members of the indicated group (e.g. "proteo" with several dotted lines leading to it means that any number and combination of proteobacterial proteins could be present on the given branch). For each icon, the number of COG trees with the given topology (upper number) and the size of the subset supported by at least 70% bootstrap values (lower number) are indicated. Uncertain topologies (lacking clearly defined taxonomic units on the other side of the subtree or those without bootstrap support) are indicated by multiple dotted lines without indication of the neighbor. Abbreviations: TA -Thema and/or Aquae; DMS -any combination of Deira, Myctu and SynPC. Note that, in some cases, which involve taxonomic clades rather than single organisms (e.g. spirochetes), failure of the corresponding species to form a clade in the given tree may lead to asymmetrical counts of topologies. For example, if a particular tree has a (Deira,(Trepa, Borbu)) branch, this tree will be included in both the Deiraspiro and spiro-Deira tallies. If, however, the subtree ((Deira, Trepa),(Aquae, Borbu)) is present, then the Deira-spiro and Aquae-spiro tallies gain one count each, but the spiro-Deira and spiro-Aquae tallies do not; instead, a case of spirochete polyphyly is registered.
pendent on the subset of sites used for analysis was noticed. Another recent study addressed the issue of a global tree through phylogenetic analysis of 14 concatenated sets of orthologous proteins, for which no strong evidence of horizontal transfer was available [33]. Notably, some of the unexpected groupings within the bacterial domain reported in this study coincide or overlap with those described here, namely, a spirochete-chlamydial clade and a Deinococcales-Cyanobacteria clade. The grouping of the latter clade with Actinomycetes, the unification of the Deinococcales-Cyanobacteria-Actinomycetes clade with Gram-positive bacteria and the grouping of the two bacterial hyperthermophiles were not reproduced in the work of Brown and co-workers. The differences between the results of the two studies could owe to the differences between data sets analyzed, the methods used or, most likely, both. We should note that the present study engaged a substantially broader data set and more diverse methods for tree construction. We believe, however, that, in terms of the potential contribution of genome-wide phylogenetic analysis to phylogenetic taxonomy, the areas where different methods and independent analyses by different groups converge might be more important than the areas of discrepancy. It appears that potential new clades re-vealed in such independent studies are strong candidates for new, high-level taxa.
The results of the present study suggest that genome trees based on new, integral criteria do not provide substantial advantages in phylogenetic reconstruction over more traditional, alignment-based methods expanded to the genomic scale. In fact, the latter seem to be more sensitive in detecting potential deep evolutionary relationships and this is expected to further improve with the increasing number of completely sequenced genomes becoming available for analysis. We believe, however, that this conclusion does not necessarily indicate that genome trees, such as those based on representation of genomes in orthologous sets or conservation of gene pairs, are useless. In addition to revealing some new phylogenetic affinities, they are capable of alerting researchers to other evolutionary phenomena, such as loss of similar gene sets in different organisms and preferential horizontal gene exchange between certain lineages.

Sequence data
The sequences of the proteins encoded in complete genomes were extracted from the Genome division of the