11:25 AM - 11:40 AM
[MIS07-13] How much can we learn about ancient cells from sequence analysis? New metrics on an old problem.
Keywords:LUCA, Early life, Phylogenetics , Bioinformatics
In this presentation, we will give an overview of recent work in this area [4, 5], and also present new analyses which help identify ancient proteins. Using the COG database, we built phylogenetic trees for all protein families and analyzed the number of interdomain gene transfer events for each family. We find that proteins assigned to COGs exhibit widely variable amounts of interdomain gene transfer. By using distance matrices which relate intra-domain sequence similarity to inter-domain similarity, we find that protein families exhibiting numerous inter domain gene transfer events are also most self-similar between domains. Integrating this observation with previous analyses, ancient proteins appear to have large branch lengths separating the domains, but recent proteins are more bushy in tree shape. These findings will be discussed in the context of inferring the characteristics of the most ancient cells. Although this work provides new dimensions to analyze protein families with, more work is needed to definitively identify the proteins in the last common ancestor of the bacteria and archaea.
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