Ribosomal RNA homologies and the evolution of the filamentous blue-green bacteria

Abstract
Ribosomal RNA (rRNA) sequence homology (as determined by comparisons of T1 oligonucleotide catalogs of32P-labeled 16S rRNAs) has been used to assess phylogenetic relationships within the filamentous and unicellular blue-green bacteria, and to identify regions of evolutionary conservatism within blue-green bacterial 16S rRNAs.Nostoc andFischerella, representatives of two morphologically distinct and highly differentiated orders, are shown to be as closely related (on the basis of RNA sequence homology) as typical members of the non-blue-green bacterial genusBacillus. They are further shown to be (on the same basis) indistinguishable from typical unicellular members of a subgroup of the unicellular blue-green bacterial order Chroococcales. These results have general implications for studies of the origin of differentiated prokaryotes and of evolutionary change in prokaryotic macromolecules. In particular, they provide indirect evidence that the divergences of contemporary major prokaryotic groups are truly ancient ones.