Evolution: origin of eukaryotes: Archaea preplanning (Evolution)

by David Turell @, Wednesday, August 26, 2020, 19:43 (1338 days ago) @ David Turell

Theoretical fusion of Archaea and Bacteria to create an organism that survives without oxygen:

https://phys.org/news/2020-08-genes-chlamydiae-complex-life-oxygen.html

"Life on Earth can be classified into two main categories: eukaryotes (e.g., plants, animals, fungi, amoeba) and prokaryotes (e.g., bacteria and archaea). In comparison to relatively simple prokaryotic cells, eukaryotic cells have complex cellular organization. How such cellular complexity evolved has puzzled scientists for decades. The prevailing hypothesis for the evolution of eukaryotes involves the merger, or symbiosis, of two prokaryotes—an archaeon and a bacterium—nearly two-billion years ago, in environments with little oxygen. Scientists assume that these microbes co-operated with each other to survive without oxygen by exchanging nutrients. While we do not know what these nutrient were, many scientists think that hydrogen might be the answer.

'To find an answer to this two-billion year old mystery, scientists look at genomes of modern prokaryotes and eukaryotes to find genes for living without oxygen and nutrient metabolism with hydrogen. Much like fossils, genomes hold clues to the evolutionary history of their ancestors. In our cells, we have a specialized factory called the mitochondrion—or powerhouse of the cell—that helps us make energy using the oxygen we breathe and the sugar we eat. However, some mitochondria are able to make energy without oxygen by producing hydrogen gas. Since hydrogen has been proposed to have been an important nutrient for the origin of eukaryotes, scientists think that hydrogen production was present in one of the two-billion year old partners: the archaeon or the bacterium. However, there is no evidence for this with present data.

"In an article published in Science Advances, a team of international researchers has discovered an unexpected source of these genes at the bottom of the ocean from the Anoxychlamydiales, a newly discovered group of Chlamydiae. Anoxychlamydiales live without oxygen, and have genes for producing hydrogen—a trait that has never before been identified in Chlamydiae. The researchers were surprised to find that the chlamydial genes for hydrogen production closely resembled those found in eukaryotes. This strongly suggests that ancient chlamydiae contributed these genes during the evolution of eukaryotes.

***

"Finding chlamydiae that can live without oxygen has important implications in itself. These bacteria are typically known as pathogens of humans and other animals, even though they can also infect single-cell eukaryotes such as amoeba. All chlamydiae known to date live inside eukaryotic cells.

"'Finding chlamydiae that might be able to live without oxygen, produce hydrogen, and live outside a eukaryote challenges our previously held conceptions," says Jennah Dharamshi. "Our findings suggest that chlamydiae may be important members of the ecosystem on the ocean floor and that perhaps all chlamydiae are not that bad after all.'"

Comment: This unusual finding supports my concept of God's pre-planning for advances.


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