phylogenic classification

phylogenic classification

Since the time of Darwin, science has accepted the principle that species decended from an ever more limited number of common ancestors, back to a single common ancestor. This all inclusive hierarchy has formed the basis for phylogenic classification. Modern phylogenetics is conducted at the molecular level using nucleotide (DNA and RNA) and amino acid (protein) sequencing. To an extent, a hierarchical tree of life has been derived using molecular phylogenetics.More recently, discussions have taken place, deriving evidence that most archaeal and bacterial genomes, and by inference the ancestral eukaryote genome, contain genes from multiple sources. Such lateral gene transfer, if extensive, would deny the hypothesis of a single universal tree. If so, life would comprise multiple, superimposed trees. 


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Related Words

Phylum

Darwin

ancestor

molecular

nucleotide

amino acid

protein

hierarchical

archaeal

bacterial

genomes

ancestral

eukaryote

hypothesis

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