Mitochondria are not captive bacteria
Autor: | Ajith Harish, Charles G. Kurland |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
0106 biological sciences
0301 basic medicine Statistics and Probability Genome evolution Proteome Protein domain 010603 evolutionary biology 01 natural sciences Genome General Biochemistry Genetics and Molecular Biology Biological Coevolution 03 medical and health sciences Phylogenetics Symbiosis Gene Phylogeny Genetics General Immunology and Microbiology biology Applied Mathematics Last universal ancestor General Medicine biology.organism_classification Biological Evolution Mitochondria 030104 developmental biology Modeling and Simulation Eukaryote General Agricultural and Biological Sciences Archaea |
Zdroj: | Journal of theoretical biology. 434 |
ISSN: | 1095-8541 |
Popis: | Lynn Sagan's conjecture (1967) that three of the fundamental organelles observed in eukaryote cells, specifically mitochondria, plastids and flagella were once free-living primitive (prokaryotic) cells was accepted after considerable opposition. Even though the idea was swiftly refuted for the specific case of origins of flagella in eukaryotes, the symbiosis model in general was accepted for decades as a realistic hypothesis to describe the endosymbiotic origins of eukaryotes. However, a systematic analysis of the origins of the mitochondrial proteome based on empirical genome evolution models now indicates that 97% of modern mitochondrial protein domains as well their homologues in bacteria and archaea were present in the universal common ancestor (UCA) of the modern tree of life (ToL). These protein domains are universal modular building blocks of modern genes and genomes, each of which is identified by a unique tertiary structure and a specific biochemical function as well as a characteristic sequence profile. Further, phylogeny reconstructed from genome-scale evolution models reveals that Eukaryotes and Akaryotes (archaea and bacteria) descend independently from UCA. That is to say, Eukaryotes and Akaryotes are both primordial lineages that evolved in parallel. Finally, there is no indication of massive inter-lineage exchange of coding sequences during the descent of the two lineages. Accordingly, we suggest that the evolution of the mitochondrial proteome was autogenic (endogenic) and not endosymbiotic (exogenic). |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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