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Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms

Cladistics is a biological philosophy that uses genealogical relationship among species and an inferred sequence of divergence as the basis of classification. This review critically surveys the chronological development of biological classification from Aristotle through our postgenomic era with a c...

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Autores principales: Ho, Chi-Chun, Lau, Susanna K. P., Woo, Patrick C. Y.
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Higher Education Press 2013
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4875529/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23873078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-013-3050-9
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author Ho, Chi-Chun
Lau, Susanna K. P.
Woo, Patrick C. Y.
author_facet Ho, Chi-Chun
Lau, Susanna K. P.
Woo, Patrick C. Y.
author_sort Ho, Chi-Chun
collection PubMed
description Cladistics is a biological philosophy that uses genealogical relationship among species and an inferred sequence of divergence as the basis of classification. This review critically surveys the chronological development of biological classification from Aristotle through our postgenomic era with a central focus on cladistics. In 1957, Julian Huxley coined cladogenesis to denote splitting from subspeciation. In 1960, the English translation of Willi Hennig’s 1950 work, Systematic Phylogenetics, was published, which received strong opposition from pheneticists, such as numerical taxonomists Peter Sneath and Robert Sokal, and evolutionary taxonomist, Ernst Mayr, and sparked acrimonious debates in 1960–1980. In 1977–1990, Carl Woese pioneered in using small subunit rRNA gene sequences to delimitate the three domains of cellular life and established major prokaryotic phyla. Cladistics has since dominated taxonomy. Despite being compatible with modern microbiological observations, i.e. organisms with unusual phenotypes, restricted expression of characteristics and occasionally being uncultivable, increasing recognition of pervasiveness and abundance of horizontal gene transfer has challenged relevance and validity of cladistics. The mosaic nature of eukaryotic and prokaryotic genomes was also gradually discovered. In the mid-2000s, high-throughput and whole-genome sequencing became routine and complex geneologies of organisms have led to the proposal of a reticulated web of life. While genomics only indirectly leads to understanding of functional adaptations to ecological niches, computational modeling of entire organisms is underway and the gap between genomics and phenetics may soon be bridged. Controversies are not expected to settle as taxonomic classifications shall remain subjective to serve the human scientist, not the classified.
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spelling pubmed-48755292016-06-07 Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms Ho, Chi-Chun Lau, Susanna K. P. Woo, Patrick C. Y. Protein Cell Review Cladistics is a biological philosophy that uses genealogical relationship among species and an inferred sequence of divergence as the basis of classification. This review critically surveys the chronological development of biological classification from Aristotle through our postgenomic era with a central focus on cladistics. In 1957, Julian Huxley coined cladogenesis to denote splitting from subspeciation. In 1960, the English translation of Willi Hennig’s 1950 work, Systematic Phylogenetics, was published, which received strong opposition from pheneticists, such as numerical taxonomists Peter Sneath and Robert Sokal, and evolutionary taxonomist, Ernst Mayr, and sparked acrimonious debates in 1960–1980. In 1977–1990, Carl Woese pioneered in using small subunit rRNA gene sequences to delimitate the three domains of cellular life and established major prokaryotic phyla. Cladistics has since dominated taxonomy. Despite being compatible with modern microbiological observations, i.e. organisms with unusual phenotypes, restricted expression of characteristics and occasionally being uncultivable, increasing recognition of pervasiveness and abundance of horizontal gene transfer has challenged relevance and validity of cladistics. The mosaic nature of eukaryotic and prokaryotic genomes was also gradually discovered. In the mid-2000s, high-throughput and whole-genome sequencing became routine and complex geneologies of organisms have led to the proposal of a reticulated web of life. While genomics only indirectly leads to understanding of functional adaptations to ecological niches, computational modeling of entire organisms is underway and the gap between genomics and phenetics may soon be bridged. Controversies are not expected to settle as taxonomic classifications shall remain subjective to serve the human scientist, not the classified. Higher Education Press 2013-07-19 2013-09 /pmc/articles/PMC4875529/ /pubmed/23873078 http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-013-3050-9 Text en © Higher Education Press and Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 2013
spellingShingle Review
Ho, Chi-Chun
Lau, Susanna K. P.
Woo, Patrick C. Y.
Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
title Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
title_full Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
title_fullStr Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
title_full_unstemmed Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
title_short Romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
title_sort romance of the three domains: how cladistics transformed the classification of cellular organisms
topic Review
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4875529/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/23873078
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s13238-013-3050-9
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