For now, it is still not certain whether Archaea is the sister group of all Bacteria, or only of one branch of Bacteria.<p>There are some very important differences between Archaea and Bacteria, in membrane composition and in the nucleic acid replication and protein synthesis mechanisms, but there are several hypotheses about how these differences could have evolved and there is not enough evidence yet to be sure which of them is true, i.e. whether the distinctive membranes, ribosomes and certain enzymes of Archaea have never been like those of Bacteria, or they have evolved from those of Bacteria.<p>The eukaryotes are hybrids, mainly between some Archaea and some bacteria (the ancestors of mitochondria). It is not completely certain whether the ancestor of the eukaryotes from Archaea belonged to a branch that was sister to all still existing Archaea or only of one branch of Archaea, but here the evidence makes it very likely that the ancestor of the eukaryotes belonged to an interior branch that was nested within the existing Archaea, i.e. it was sister to only one branch of the present Archaea.<p>In the history of life, there have been many events of hybridization between very distant living beings, so the tree of evolution is only approximately a tree, while actually being a more general directed graph. A part of these events have been the results of symbiosis, the most frequent cases being of symbiosis with some phototrophic organism able to capture solar light or with some bacteria able to consume some unusual substance from the environment.<p>Other such hybridization events have been with viruses, when the genes for some enzymes have been transferred permanently from viruses to their hosts and they have been retained, presumably for being better than the versions used by the hosts for the same function, previously. Even vertebrates and humans have a small fraction of their genome that originates from viruses.