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23.1C: Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

  • Page ID
    13579
    • Boundless
    • Boundless
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    Eukaryotes may have been a product of one cell engulfing another and evolving over time until the separate cells became a single organism.

    Learning Objectives
    • Describe the general concept of endosymbiosis and the evolution of eukaryotes

    Key Points

    • Endosymbiosis is the concept of one cell engulfing another and both cells benefiting from the relationship.
    • Endosymbiosis was originally considered after the observation of the similarity between plant chloroplasts and free-living cyanobacteria.
    • Peroxisomes may have been the first endosymbionts, caused by the increasing amount of atmospheric oxygen at that point in geological time.
    • Over time, endosymbionts may have transferred some of their DNA to the host nucleus, thus becoming dependent on the host for survival and completing full integration into a single organism.

    Key Terms

    • cyanobacteria: photosynthetic prokaryotic microorganisms, of phylum Cyanobacteria, once known as blue-green algae
    • peroxisome: a eukaryotic organelle that is the source of the enzymes that catalyze the production and breakdown of hydrogen peroxide and are responsible for the oxidation of long-chain fatty acids
    • endosymbiont: an organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism

    Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

    To fully understand eukaryotic organisms, it is necessary to understand that all extant eukaryotes are descendants of a chimeric organism that was a composite of a host cell and the cell(s) of an alpha-proteobacterium that “took up residence” inside the host. This major theme in the origin of eukaryotes is known as endosymbiosis, where one cell engulfs another such that the engulfed cell survives and both cells benefit. Over many generations, a symbiotic relationship can result in two organisms that depend on each other so completely that neither could survive on its own. Endosymbiotic events probably contributed to the origin of the last common ancestor (LCA) of today’s eukaryotes.

    image
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Endosymbiosis: Modern eukaryotic cells evolved from more primitive cells that engulfed bacteria with useful properties, such as energy production. Combined, the once-independent organisms flourished and evolved into a single organism.

    Endosymbiotic Theory

    The endosymbiotic theory was first articulated by the Russian botanist Konstantin Mereschkowski in 1905. Mereschkowski was familiar with work by botanist Andreas Schimper, who had observed in 1883 that the division of chloroplasts in green plants closely resembled that of free-living cyanobacteria. Schimper had tentatively proposed that green plants arose from a symbiotic union of two organisms. Ivan Wallin extended the idea of an endosymbiotic origin to mitochondria in the 1920s. These theories were initially dismissed or ignored. More detailed electron microscopic comparisons between cyanobacteria and chloroplasts combined with the discovery that plastids ( organelles associated with photosynthesis) and mitochondria contain their own DNA led to a resurrection of the idea in the 1960s. The endosymbiotic theory was advanced and substantiated with microbiological evidence by Lynn Margulis in 1967.

    image
    Figure \(\PageIndex{1}\): Chloroplasts in plants: A eukaryote with mitochondria engulfed a cyanobacterium in an event of serial primary endosymbiosis, creating a lineage of cells with both organelles. These cyanobacteria have become chloroplasts in modern plant cells. The cyanobacterial endosymbiont already had a double membrane.

    In 1981 she argued that eukaryotic cells originated as communities of interacting entities, including endosymbiotic spirochetes that developed into eukaryotic flagella and cilia. This last idea has not received much acceptance because flagella lack DNA and do not show ultrastructural similarities to bacteria or archaea. According to Margulis and Dorion Sagan, “Life did not take over the globe by combat, but by networking” (i.e., by cooperation). The possibility that the peroxisome organelles may have an endosymbiotic origin has also been considered, although they lack DNA. Christian de Duve proposed that they may have been the first endosymbionts, allowing cells to withstand growing amounts of free molecular oxygen in the earth’s atmosphere. However, it now appears that they may be formed de novo, contradicting the idea that they have a symbiotic origin.

    It is believed that over millennia these endosymbionts transferred some of their own DNA to the host cell’s nucleus during the evolutionary transition from a symbiotic community to an instituted eukaryotic cell (called “serial endosymbiosis”). This hypothesis is thought to be possible because it is known today from scientific observation that transfer of DNA occurs between bacteria species, even if they are not closely related. Bacteria can take up DNA from their surroundings and have a limited ability to incorporate it into their own genome.


    This page titled 23.1C: Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes is shared under a CC BY-SA 4.0 license and was authored, remixed, and/or curated by Boundless.

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