6533b872fe1ef96bd12d2e0b

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Tracking evolutionary trends towards increasing complexity: a case study in Cyanobacteria

Andrés MoyaPedro Bernaola-galvánCristina Gómez-martínMiguel VerdúJosé L. OliverLuis DelayeR De La FuenteFrancisco M. GonzálezRamón Román-roldánVicente ArnauAmparo LatorreW. DiazRicardo Lebrón

subject

Genome evolutionNatural selectionPhylogenetic treeGenome complexityEvolutionary biologyBiologyGenomePhylum Cyanobacteria

description

AbstractProgressive evolution, the tendency towards increasing complexity, is a controversial issue in Biology, whose resolution requires a proper measurement of complexity. Genomes are the best entities to address this challenge, as they record the history and information gaining of organisms in their ongoing biotic and environmental interactions. Using six metrics of genome complexity, none of which is primarily associated to biological function, we measure genome complexity in 91 genomes from the phylum Cyanobacteria. Several phylogenetic analyses reveal the existence of progressive evolution towards higher genome complexity: 1) all the metrics detect strong phylogenetic signals; 2) ridge regressions detect positive trends towards higher complexity; and 3) classical proofs for progressive evolution (the minimum, the ancestor-descendent and the sub-clade tests), show that some of these positive trends are driven, being mainly due to natural selection. These findings support the existence of progressive genome evolution in this ancient and diverse group of organisms.

10.1101/2020.01.29.924464http://dx.doi.org/10.1101/2020.01.29.924464