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Items: 3

1.
F <span style="font-variant: small-caps" class="small-caps">IG</span> . 2.—

F IG . 2.—. From: Streamlining and Large Ancestral Genomes in Archaea Inferred with a Phylogenetic Birth-and-Death Model.

Branch-specific loss rates compared with expected numbers of substitutions (or edge length) for each branch e. Pairs of sibling terminal taxa are connected by lines.

Miklós Csűrös, et al. Mol Biol Evol. 2009 Sep;26(9):2087-2095.
2.
F <span style="font-variant: small-caps" class="small-caps">IG</span> . 1.—

F IG . 1.—. From: Streamlining and Large Ancestral Genomes in Archaea Inferred with a Phylogenetic Birth-and-Death Model.

Consensus evolutionary tree of Archaea in the study. The consensus is based on maximum likelihood trees for concatenated alignments of ribosomal and unique conserved proteins. Branch lengths are set by maximum likelihood for the r-proteins. Recognized archaeal orders are highlighted. The boxed triples on the left show the percentage of bootstrap samples supporting the particular edges in three data sets (from 500 replicates for each set): r-proteins, uc-proteins, and uc-proteins without C. symbiosum(Censy) and N. equitans(Naneq). All other edges have >97% bootstrap support in all data sets. Numbers next to the terminal taxa denote genome size in million base pairs.

Miklós Csűrös, et al. Mol Biol Evol. 2009 Sep;26(9):2087-2095.
3.
F <span style="font-variant: small-caps" class="small-caps">IG</span> . 3.—

F IG . 3.—. From: Streamlining and Large Ancestral Genomes in Archaea Inferred with a Phylogenetic Birth-and-Death Model.

A digest of gene content evolution in Archaea. The bar graphs plot posterior means for number of families. The chart on the left shows the number of families with at least one homolog; the fatter part of the bar is proportional to the number of multigene families. The chart in the middle plots the families acquired and lost on the branch leading to the indicated node. The net change is highlighted by the solid part of the bars. The chart on the right shows how many families underwent a contraction from multigene to single-gene composition, or expanded from a single homolog to multiple paralogs. For instance, the common ancestor of Methanococcales is inferred to have had 1723 gene families, out of which 156 were gained after the split with Methanobacteriales. During the same time, 586 families present at the common ancestor M1 were lost, and the solid bar indicates the net loss of 430 ( = 586-156) families. Among multimember families retained from M1, 68 contracted to a single homolog, and 13 single-member families expanded. Note that scaling is the same on the left-hand side and in the middle,but different on the right-hand side.

Miklós Csűrös, et al. Mol Biol Evol. 2009 Sep;26(9):2087-2095.

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