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      Future trypanosomatid phylogenies: refined homologies, supertrees and networks

      research-article
      Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
      Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde
      gene trees, characterization, Trypanosoma, Leishmania, Crithidia

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          Abstract

          There has been good progress in inferring the evolutionary relationships within trypanosomes from DNA data as until relatively recently, many relationships have remained rather speculative. Ongoing molecular studies have provided data that have adequately shown Trypanosoma to be monophyletic and, rather surprisingly, that there are sharply contrasting levels of genetic variation within and between the major trypanosomatid groups. There are still, however, areas of research that could benefit from further development and resolution that broadly fall upon three questions. Are the current statements of evolutionary homology within ribosomal small sub-unit genes in need of refinement? Can the published phylograms be expanded upon to form `supertrees' depicting further relationships? Does a bifurcating tree structure impose an untenable dogma upon trypanosomatid phylogeny where hybridisation or reticulate evolutionary steps have played a part? This article briefly addresses these three questions and, in so doing, hopes to stimulate further interest in the molecular evolution of the group.

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          Most cited references29

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          Gene Trees in Species Trees

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            Phylogenetic supertrees: Assembling the trees of life.

            Systematists and comparative biologists commonly want to make statements about relationships among taxa that have never been collectively included in any single phylogenetic analysis. Construction of phylogenetic 'supertrees' provides one solution. Supertrees are estimates of phylogeny assembled from sets of smaller estimates (source trees) sharing some but not necessarily all their taxa in common. If certain conditions are met, supertrees can retain all or most of the information from the source trees and also make novel statements about relationships of taxa that do not co-occur on any one source tree. Supertrees have commonly been constructed using subjective and informal approaches, but several explicit approaches have recently been proposed.
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              Phylogeny of trypanosomes as inferred from the small and large subunit rRNAs: implications for the evolution of parasitism in the trypanosomatid protozoa.

              Sequences of the small rRNA genes and partial sequences of the large rRNA genes were obtained by PCR amplification from a variety of vertebrate trypanosomes. The trypanosome species and hosts included Trypanosoma avium from a bird, T. rotatorium from an amphibian, T. boissoni from an elasmobranch, T. triglae from a marine teleost and T. carassii from a freshwater teleost. Phylogenetic relationships among these species and other representatives of the family Trypanosomatidae were inferred using maximum likelihood, maximum parsimony and evolutionary parsimony. The trypanosomatid tree was rooted using rRNA sequences from two species from the suborder Bodonina. All methods showed that the mammalian parasite, Trypanosoma brucei, constitutes the earliest divergent branch. The remaining trypanosomes formed a monophyletic group. Within this group, the bird trypanosome was grouped with T. cruzi, while the elasmobranch trypanosome and the two fish trypanosome species formed a group with an affinity to T. rotatorium. Our results provide no evidence for co-evolution of trypanosomatids and their hosts, either vertebrate or invertebrate. This suggests that evolution of trypanosomatids was accompanied by secondary acquisitions of hosts and habitats.
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                Author and article information

                Journal
                mioc
                Memórias do Instituto Oswaldo Cruz
                Mem. Inst. Oswaldo Cruz
                Instituto Oswaldo Cruz, Ministério da Saúde (Rio de Janeiro, RJ, Brazil )
                0074-0276
                1678-8060
                August 2000
                : 95
                : 4
                : 523-526
                Affiliations
                [01] London orgnameNatural History Museum orgdiv1Department of Zoology orgdiv2Biomedical Parasitology Division UK
                Article
                S0074-02762000000400014 S0074-0276(00)09500414
                10.1590/S0074-02762000000400014
                997d8238-450d-4aee-a88d-6db99ced0cc0

                This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.

                History
                : 13 April 2000
                : 15 May 2000
                Page count
                Figures: 0, Tables: 0, Equations: 0, References: 25, Pages: 4
                Product

                SciELO Brazil

                Categories
                The Trypanosomatid Evolution Workshop

                Trypanosoma,Leishmania,Crithidia,gene trees,characterization

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