--Must See--

Bioinformatics Summer Internship 2024 With Hands-On-Training + Project / Dissertation - 30 Days, 3 Months & 6 Months Duration

The Long Slow Dance of Cell Evolution | Cells evolved to give rise to Humans

The first living beings on earth were single-cell organisms. Those cells were quite simple, but during the course of evolution they gave way to a more complex cellular lineage – the eukaryotes, or cells with a nucleus.

According to researchers including one from Bangalore’s National Centre for Biological Sciences, this evolution probably was a result of growing intimacy between the single-celled relatives. This intimacy resulted  led to the rise of the most complex life forms on earth, including multi-cellular organisms such as animals or plants.

The first eukaryote is thought to have arisen when prokaryotes – the kingdoms of archaea and bacteria – joined forces. Prokaryotes are single-celled organisms that have no cell nucleus.

But researchers have now proposed that the molecular machinery essential to eukaryotic life was probably borrowed, little by little over time, from those simpler ancestors.

“We are beginning to think of eukaryotic origins as a slow process of growing intimacy – the result of a long, slow dance between kingdoms, and not a quick tryst, which is the way it is portrayed in textbooks,” said Mukund Thattai from National Centre for Biological Sciences

.

The proposal is based on new genomic evidence derived from a deep-sea vent on the ocean floor.

The eukaryotic cells of plants, animals, and protists are markedly different from those of their single-celled, prokaryotic relatives, the archaea and bacteria.

Eukaryotic cells are much larger and have considerably more internal complexity, including many internal membrane-bound compartments.

Although scientists generally agree that eukaryotes can trace their ancestry to a merger between archaea and bacteria, there has been considerable disagreement about what the first eukaryote and its immediate ancestors must have looked like.

As Thattai and his colleagues Buzz Baum and Gautam Dey of University College London explained in their paper, that uncertainty has stemmed in large part from the lack of known intermediates that bridge the gap in size and complexity between prokaryotic precursors and eukaryotes.

As a result, they said, the origin of the first eukaryotic cell has remained “one of the most enduring mysteries in modern biology.”

That began to change last year with the discovery of DNA sequences for an organism, that no one has ever actually seen, living near a deep-sea vent on the ocean floor.

The genome of the archaeon known as Lokiarchaeum (‘Loki’ for short) contains more “eukaryotic signature proteins” (ESPs) than any other prokaryote.

Importantly, among those eukaryotic signature proteins are proteins critical for eukaryotes’ ability to direct traffic amongst all those inter-cellular compartments.

“The genome can be seen as ‘primed’ for eukaryogenesis. With the acquisition of a number of key genes and lipids from a bacterial symbiont, it would be possible for Loki-type cells to evolve a primitive membrane trafficking machinery and compartmentalisation,” Baum said.

The researchers predict that, when Loki is finally isolated or cultured, “it will look more like an archaeon than a proto-eukaryote and will not have internal compartments or a vesicle-trafficking network.”

But its morphology and/or cell cycle might have complexities more often associated with eukaryotes, they noted.

Mandakini is a bioscience enthusiast and loves to portray a picture of “Science” like never before. Serving as an Editor in Biotecnika she has penned down many interesting news and articles in the past and has also helped in posting just the right job for you. Follow her for more updates in the industry !!