Loved ones tree unites a diverse group of people that each  one carry genetic vestiges issued from a only common ancestor along at the base  of one's tree. however this organizational structure falls apart if genetic data  could be a communal resource as opposed to actually loved ones possession.
Some  evidence suggests that early evolution may have been based on a collective  sharing of genes. A group of researchers are now searching for clear genetic  vestiges from this communal ancestry.
But  it's hard to shake our fascination with family  trees.
My  father used to travel for work, and when he arrived in a new city, he'd open up  the phone book and check for anyone listed with our uncommon last name.  Occasionally he'd get a hit and brazenly call them up to ask: "Are we  related?"
The  answer was always yes, with the common link often being my great grandfather.
Like  my father, biologists are curious about family ties, but they go about it in a  more systematic way. Rather than phone books, they sift through genetic codes  from humans to bacteria and a lot in between. The main question is: Are the  commonly held genes similar enough to point to a common origin?
The  answer has always been yes. The implication is that we all belong to some  universal tree of life. And at the base of this tree — some have imagined —  there sits a mild-mannered microbe that lived more than 3 billion years ago,  unaware that its genes would be the starting point of an entire planet's worth  of highly differentiated life.
However,  this organism, the so-called last universal common  ancestor (or LUCA), may be just a fantasy.
"Our  perspective is that life emerged from a collective state, and so it is not at  all obvious that there is one single organism which was ancestral," said Nigel  Goldenfeld from the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign.
The  organisms belonging to this collective state would have shared genetic  information from neighbor to neighbor, rather than solely from parent to  offspring. Goldenfeld is leading a new NASA Astrobiology Institute (NAI) team that  aims to provide a clearer understanding of this early stage of evolution.
"We  are hoping to find fossils of the collective state in the genomes of organisms,"  Goldenfeld said.
Goldenfeld's  team will be performing genetic studies that will try to tease out signatures  of community-based evolution. They will complement this field and laboratory  work with theoretical modeling and computer simulations.
"The  ultimate goal is to understand how our planet's biochemistry is an  instantiation of the universal laws of life, thus addressing the question of  whether life is an inevitable and thus widespread outcome of the laws of  physics," Goldenfeld said.
A  time before Darwinism
It  might sound strange that an organism's genetic code could be the result of  "crowdsourcing." We are more familiar with traditional reproduction,  as practiced by the birds and the bees. 
In  so-called "vertical gene transfer," an organism inherits its genome  from its parents, but it does not receive an exact copy. Small changes enter  the code through reproductive mixing and mutations. This "descent with  modification," as Darwin put it, eventually allows a population of  interbreeding organisms (or species) to evolve.
If  every snippet of DNA was solely the product of descent with modification, then  every organism could be placed on a tree of life stemming from a single  ancestor. But as it turns out, "different genes go back to different  ancestors," said Peter Gogarten of the University of Connecticut, who has  done extensive work on comparative genetics.
How  is that possible? It can happen if organisms share  genes. Imagine a gene belonging to members of a specific family  tree. One day, this gene becomes isolated and gets picked up by another  organism with a different family tree. No reproduction between partners takes  place — only an "adoption" of a specific gene.
This  so-called "horizontal gene transfer" is quite common among bacteria  and archaea, as exemplified by antibiotic resistance. When a specific bacterium  develops a defense against some drug, the corresponding gene can pass  horizontally to others in the same colony.
A  2008 study in the journal Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences  (PNAS) found that 80 percent of the genes in bacteria were horizontally  transferred at some point in the past.
Complex organisms also exhibit evidence of  horizontal (or lateral) gene transfer, albeit to a lesser extent. Researchers  have shown that ancient ancestors of plants and animals "swallowed  up" other bacteria to form symbiotic relationships, which eventually  resulted in specialized cellular components, such as mitochondria and  chloroplasts.
In  his work, Gogarten has shown that horizontal gene transfer turns the tree of  life into a thick bush of branches that interweave with each other. Many of  these branches terminated long ago due to extinction, but some of their genes  live on in us, thanks to horizontal gene transfer.
Several  studies suggest that horizontal gene transfer was more prevalent in the past  when nothing but single-celled organisms inhabited the Earth.
"I  like to think of early life as being more like an undifferentiated slime  mold," Goldenfeld said. "Such a communal form of life would have no  meaningful family tree, because it is the community that varies in descent, not  individual organismal lineages." 
Evolving  evolution
The  late Carl Woese, a colleague of Goldenfeld, was one of the first scientists to  propose that early life leaned heavily on horizontal gene transfer. Woese  passed away in December of last year. He is perhaps best-remembered for  classifying life into the now-well-accepted domains of bacteria, eukaryotes  (plants, animals, fungi and protists) and archaea.
In  1987, Woese wrote about the consequences of rampant horizontal gene transfer.  In such a scenario, "a bacterium would not actually have a history in its  own right: It would be an evolutionary chimera."
A  "chimera" is the name of a creature from Greek  mythology that mixed together features of a lion, a goat and a  snake. This hybridization presumably gave the chimera an advantage over its  "competitors."
In  a 2006 PNAS paper, Kalin Vetsigian, Woese and Goldenfeld showed that microbial  chimeras may also have an advantage over their biological counterparts. The  researchers used computer models to demonstrate that the genetic code could  evolve more efficiently if organisms shared their genes collectively.  Horizontal gene transfer turned out to be a better "innovation-sharing  protocol" than vertical (Darwinian) transfer.
Now,  with his NAI team, Goldenfeld wants to confirm these simulations with genetic  studies. Specifically, they will target archaea, whose genes have yet to be  scrutinized as closely as those from the other domains, Goldenfeld said.
The  group is particularly interested in the question of how the ability to evolve  originally developed. The "evolution of evolution" sounds like a  chicken-and-egg problem — especially if you think, as Goldenfeld does, that  life is by definition something capable of evolving.
However,  evolution can utilize different mechanisms to achieve the same goal.  Goldenfeld's team will try to recover some of life's former evolutionary phases  by stressing cells and then seeing how their genomes rearrange in response.
Universal  biology
However,  DNA evidence is just one aspect of this five-year research project.
"We  want to understand how evolution works before there were species or maybe even  genes," Goldenfeld said. "So this is going beyond 'origin of species' approaches to evolution, such  as population genetics."
How  does one study evolution without genetics? One considers the "rules of the  game" that the genetic code is just one manifestation of. Goldenfeld calls  this "universal biology." It is an attempt to distill from our  specific biochemistry the general physical laws that animate matter.
Being  a physicist, Goldenfeld gives the example of thermodynamics. Life must obey  conservation of energy and the law of increasing entropy, which will certainly  influence how organisms optimize their use of resources.
Other  rules involve how to control the amount of variation in the genome from one  generation to the next. Too little variation, and organisms can't adapt to  changes in the environment. Too much variation, and organisms can't retain  useful traits.
The  team can place different sets of rules into a computer simulation and see what  sort of artificial life appears. Goldenfeld believes that formulating the  principles of universal biology may help answer one of the biggest questions of  all.
"We  would like to have a better understanding of why  life exists at all." Goldenfeld said. "Is it a phenomenon  that should be generic, like the formation of a crystalline solid, or is it  something rare and bizarre?"
This  is of special interest to astrobiologists, who wonder about the likelihood that  we are not alone. If life is eventually found elsewhere, Goldenfeld thinks  we'll have a few things in common. 
"The  principles of universal biology should be applicable to all life irrespective  of whether it is carbon chemistry-based or something stranger," he said.
Something  stranger? Okay, so maybe that means they won't be in the phone book.
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