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Nucleic Acids Research 2004 32(Web Server Issue):W45-W47; doi:10.1093/nar/gkh362
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© 2004, the authors
Nucleic Acids Research, Vol. 32, Web Server issue © Oxford University Press 2004; all rights reserved

CVTree: a phylogenetic tree reconstruction tool based on whole genomes

Ji Qi1,*, Hong Luo2 and Bailin Hao1,3

1 The Institute of Theoretical Physics, Academia Sinica, Beijing 100080, China, 2 Center of Bioinformatics, Peking University, Beijing 100871, China and 3 The T-Life Research Center, Fudan University, Shanghai 200433, China

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. Tel/Fax: +86 21 6565 2305; Email: qiji{at}itp.ac.cn

Received February 13, 2004; Revised and Accepted March 3, 2004

Composition Vector Tree (CVTree) implements a systematic method of inferring evolutionary relatedness of microbial organisms from the oligopeptide content of their complete proteomes (http://cvtree.cbi.pku.edu.cn). Since the first bacterial genomes were sequenced in 1995 there have been several attempts to infer prokaryote phylogeny from complete genomes. Most of them depend on sequence alignment directly or indirectly and, in some cases, need fine-tuning and adjustment. The composition vector method circumvents the ambiguity of choosing the genes for phylogenetic reconstruction and avoids the necessity of aligning sequences of essentially different length and gene content. This new method does not contain ‘free’ parameter and ‘fine-tuning’. A bootstrap test for a phylogenetic tree of 139 organisms has shown the stability of the branchings, which support the small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) tree of life in its overall structure and in many details. It may provide a quick reference in prokaryote phylogenetics whenever the proteome of an organism is available, a situation that will become commonplace in the near future.


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