The tree of one percent
The article "The tree of one percent" by T. Dagan and W. Martin challenges the traditional view of the tree of life as a single, bifurcating tree. The authors argue that the vast majority of genes in microbial genomes are not universally distributed, but have been transferred between different lineages through lateral gene transfer (LGT). This means that the tree of life as we know it is based on only a small fraction of the genes in microbial genomes, and that the true evolutionary relationships between microbes are much more complex than a simple tree can represent. The authors support their argument by analyzing the distribution of 5,833 human proteins in prokaryotic genomes. They found that only 31 of these proteins were universally distributed, meaning that they were present in all of the prokaryotic genomes that they analyzed. The remaining 5,797 proteins were either absent from some genomes, or were present in only a subset of genomes. This suggests that the vast majo...