Symbionticism revisited: a discussion of the evolutionary impact of intracellular symbioses
Wallin (1927) first published the notion that the fusion of bacteria with host cells was the principal source of genetic novelty for speciation. He suggested that mitochondria are transitional elements in this process. While the significance that he attributed to symbiosis now seem excessive, he was...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Proceedings of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences Biological sciences, 1979-04, Vol.204 (1155), p.267-286 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Wallin (1927) first published the notion that the fusion of bacteria with host cells was the principal source of genetic novelty
for speciation. He suggested that mitochondria are transitional elements in this process. While the significance that he attributed
to symbiosis now seem excessive, he was one of the first authors to be aware of the evolutionary potential of symbiotic events
and his view of mitochondria may not seem strange to many cell biologists today. The most significant evolutionary development
which has been attributed to intracellular symbiosis is the origin of eukaryotic cellular organization. The current status
of the 'serial endosymbiosis hypothesis' is briefly reviewed. The case for the symbiotic origin of the chloroplast, based
principally on 16 S RNA oligonucleotide cataloguing, is very strong. Mitochondrial origins are more obscure but also appear
to be symbiotic due to recent 18 S cataloguing from wheat embryos. The probability of the multiple origin of some eukaryotic
organelles is also examined, the processes in question being the acquisition of distinct stocks of chloroplasts from disparate
photosynthetic prokaryotes and the secondary donation of organelles from degenerate eukaryotic endosymbionts to their hosts,
with specific reference to the dinoflagellates Peridinium balticum, Kryptoperidinium foliaceum and the ciliate Mesodinium
rubrum. It is concluded that the evolutionary potential of intracellular symbiosis ('cytobiosis': a term introduced in this
paper) is great, with the best established influence being on the origin of eukaryotic chloroplasts. Together with the potential
effects of viral vectors, symbiosis serves as a supplementary speciation mechanism capable of producing directed evolutionary
changes. It is likely that these processes will explain some of the apparent anomalies in evolutionary rates and direction
which are not readily explicable by the conventional synthetic theory of evolution. |
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ISSN: | 0080-4649 0962-8452 0950-1193 2053-9193 1471-2954 |
DOI: | 10.1098/rspb.1979.0027 |