Comparison of Ribosomal and Isozymic Phylogenies of Tetrahymenine Ciliates
- 1 January 1989
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wiley in The Journal of Protozoology
- Vol. 36 (1) , 1-8
- https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1550-7408.1989.tb02661.x
Abstract
A recent analysis of sequence variations in ribosomal RNA''s from 31 species of tetrahymenine ciliates groups them into 9 sets referred to as "ribosets." These species associations are not well correlated with the distributions of distinctive morphological characteristics. The phylogenetic structure suggests that modern "pyriform" tetrahymenines may be paraphyletic survivors of promitive design and that the morphologically distinctive forms may include examples of convergent evolution of derived forms. Alternatively, the common ancestor may have been a polymorphic species that has lost its plasticity in some derived lineages. In an attempt to test the ribosomal phylogeny, we here compare it with a phylogeny based on isozymic variation. The main features of the ribosomal and isozymic phylogenies are similar. The carnivorous (macrostome-forming) species are widely scattered in both, as are the bacteriophagous pyriform species. Isozymic and ribosomal analyses are optimally useful, however, in different contexts. Isozymic variations can distinguish species that are ribosomally identical. Ribosomal variations provide more secure evaluations of distant relationships.Keywords
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