Title: Chapter 9 Eukaryotic Cells and Multicellular Organisms
1Chapter 9 Eukaryotic Cells andMulticellular
Organisms
Figure CO Oblong shaped Giardia
Courtesy of Dr. Stan Erlandsen/CDC
2Overview
- The origin of cells with eukaryotic organization,
some 2.5 Bya, facilitated the evolution of
multicellularity - Endosymbiosis was important in the origin of
eukaryotes - Five supergroups of eukaryotes are recognized
- DNA in eukaryotic cells is dispersed among
several linear chromosomes - There are separate mitochondrial and chloroplast
genomes - Meiosis and some form of sexual reproduction are
almost universal in eukaryotes - Some eukaryotes are multicellular
3Evolution of Eukaryotes
- As early as 1.5 Bya eukaryotic cells appear as
fossils
Figure 01A Microfossils of probable eukaryotic
cells
Figure 01B Microfossils of probable eukaryotic
cells
Figure 01C Microfossils of probable eukaryotic
cells
Reproduced from Schopf, J.W., Scientific American
239 (1978) 111-138. Courtesy of J. William
Schopf, Professor of Paleobiology Director of
IGPP CSEOL
4Evolution of Eukaryotes
- Grypania spiralis has been found in ancient rocks
in Michigan - This fossil is preserved because it formed simple
shells
5Still Another Tree of Life
- A Tree of Life was established using nucleotide
sequences from 5S rRNA of over 30 species of
prokaryotes and eukaryotes - This tree is from 1979
- There are still three grades recognized here
animals, plants and fungi - Unfortunately, protistans are omitted from this
analysis
Figure 02 Phylogenetic tree
Adapted from Hori, H. and S. Osawa, Proc. Natl
Acad. Sci. USA 76 (1979) 381-385.
6Single-Celled Eukaryotes Protistans
- Early eukaryotes were single-celled organisms or
simple filaments - Today, most eukaryotes are multicellular
- All unicellular eukaryotes can be classified in
the kingdom Protista - Endosymbiotic events provided mitochondria,
chloroplasts - Microtubules drive the nuclear chromosomal
division (mitosis) - But the Kindgom Protista does not appear to be
monophyletic
7Five Eukaryotic Supergroups
alveolates chromalveolates
Others would establish six supergroups
Figure B01 Eukaryotic tree of life
Adapted from Keeling, P.J., et al., Trends Ecol.
Evol. 20 (2005) 670-676.
8Five Eukaryotic Supergroups
- Plantae Archaeplastida Charophyta (stem
group), red algae, green algae, and land plants - Excavata Various Protistans, many with
parasitic lifestyles (e.g., Giardia, Trichomonas,
Trypanosoma) - Chromalveolata Many of the algae, heterotrophic
ciliates, and other Protistan parasites such as
Plasmodium falciparum - Rhizaria A group advocated for by
Cavalier-Smith containing heterotrophic
Protistans such as foraminiferans and
radiolarians - Unikonta Still other parastitic Protistans,
choanoflagellates, fungi, animals, and Amebozoans
including slime molds
9Five Eukaryotic SupergroupsPlantae
Archaeplastida
Charophyta (stem group)
red and green algae
Red algae
Chlorophytes
Viridiplantae
Charophytes
Streptophyta
land plants
Plantae
Embryophytes
10Five Eukaryotic Supergroups Excavata
Trichomonas
Giardia
Trypanosoma
11Five Eukaryotic Supergroups Chromalveolata
dinoflagellates
brown algae
diatoms
Plasmodium falciparum
water molds
12Five Eukaryotic Supergroups Rhizaria
foraminiferans
Figure B03 Diversity of forms of foraminiferans
radiolarians
Reproduced from E. Haeckel. Art Forms in Nature.
New York Dover Publications, Inc., 1974.
13Five Eukaryotic Supergroups Unikonta
choanoflagellates
animals
amoeba
cellular slime mold
plasmodial slime mold
fungi
14Six Eukaryotic Supergroups
As more data is collected, especially DNA
sequence data, from more example organisms, and
more data about Horizontal Gene Transfer, these
groups will be revised. Probably many times.
Unikontans
Figure B02 Eukaryotic tree of life
Adapted from Adl, S.M., Simpson, A.G.B., et al.,
J. Eukaryot. Microbiol. 52 (2005) 399-451.
15Bikontans Unikontans
Lots of competing hypotheses!
16Origin of the Eukaryotes?
- We may never know the correct pathway or how many
steps were involved. - Endosymbiosis is very likely an important part of
this process. - Which came first the nucleus, mitochondria or
chloroplasts as organelles?
17Origin of the Eukaryotes
- Free-living bacteria developed mutually
beneficial relationships within a host
prokaryotic cell. - Some aerobic bacteria developed into mitochondria
and cyanobacteria into chloroplasts, eventually
producing the eukaryotic cells of animals and
plants.
18Origin of the Eukaryotes
19Origin of the Eukaryotes
20Origin and Evolution of Mitochondria and
Chloroplasts
- Ancient anaerobic eukaryotic cells evolved the
ability to engulf (endocytose or phagocytize)
prokaryotes
The ciliate Paramecium bursaria houses hundreds
of symbiotic green algae which can be liberated
from the Protistan cell and will live
independently
Figure 03 Symbiotic relationships between a
eukaryote and its photosynthetic organelles.
Courtesy of Anthony L. Swinehart, Hillsdale
College
21Organelle DNA Differsfrom Nuclear DNA
- In location organelle vs. nucleus
- In organization single circular vs. multiple
linear strands - In function which proteins are coded for and
how are they regulated - In mode of replication and inheritance
organelle DNA transmitted maternally during cell
division during cytokinesis while nuclear DNA is
sorted during nuclear division (mitosis and
meiosis)
22Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA)
- Mt DNA is a single double-stranded circular DNA
molecule - There are several copies in each mitochondrion
and there are many mitochondria in each
eukaryotic cell - Mt DNA is similar to prokaryotic DNA there are
no histones or any other protein associated with
mt DNA and Mt DNA genes contain no introns - Because Mt DNA is in a highly oxidizing
environment, Mt DNA has a much higher mutation
rate than nuclear DNA - Mt DNA genes code for mitochondrial ribosomes and
transfer RNAs - Some Mt DNA genes code for polypeptide subunits
of the electron transport chain common to all
mitochondria - Mt DNA relies on nuclear gene products for
replication and transcription
23Chloroplast DNA (cpDNA)
- CP DNA is a single double-stranded circular DNA
molecule (the smallest of the three plant
genomes) - 20-200 copies in every chloroplast several
thousand copies in each green leaf cell CP DNA
constitutes one-fourth of all DNA in a plant cell - Consists of large (LSC) and small (SSC)
single-copy regions separated by two inverted
repeat regions - Inherited uniparentally from the maternal (seed)
parent - CP DNA contains some 113 genes, 20 of which
contain introns most of these genes are involved
with photosynthesis and plastid gene expression - Structural rearrangments of the genome are rare
(but when they occur, they are useful in
establishing relationships phylogenetically
e.g., losses of genes and introns, inversions, IR
expansions or contractions)
24Origin of VariousPhotosynthetic Eukaryotes
The Origin of early Eukaryotic Ancestors leading
to the lineages of animals and fungi was probably
an independent event from that of the origin of
plants
Figure 04 Primary, secondary and tertiary
endosymbiosis
Adapted Cracraft, J. and M. J. Donoghue (Eds).
Assembling the Tree of Life. Oxford University
Press, 2004.
25Transfer of Genes Between Organelles and Nucleus
- Many genes were transferred to the eukaryotic
nucleus conversely, some nuclear genes were
transferred to organelle genomes - Two examples are genes for anaerobic glycolysis
and genes for amino acid synthesis - Chloroplasts synthesize only a small portion of
the proteins they use - Transfer of nuclear genes coding for symbiotic
organelle proteins - Such gene transfers improve efficiency and reduce
the likelihood of mutations
26Transfer of Genes Between Organelles and Nucleus
- Genes transferred to and from the eukaryotic
nucleus are a form of horizontal gene transfer - The transfer of genes between the nucleus and the
organelles complicates their use in establishing
phylogenies - Despite many potential problems, DNA sequences
have become important characters in the study of
evolutionary relationships
27The Molecular Clock
- Molecular clocks use mutations to estimate
evolutionary time - Mutations add up at a constant rate in related
species - This rate is the ticking of the molecular clock
- As more time passes, there will be more mutations
- Scientists estimate mutation rates by linking
molecular data and real time
28Organelle DNA as a Molecular Clock
When a stretch of DNA serves as molecular clock,
it becomes a powerful tool for estimating the
dates of lineage-splitting events
- Imagine that a length of DNA found in two species
differs by four bases and we know that this
entire length of DNA changes at a rate of
approximately one base per 25 million years - That means that the two DNA versions differ by
100 million years of evolution and that their
common ancestor lived 50 million years ago - Since each lineage experienced its own evolution,
the two species must have descended from a common
ancestor that lived at least 50 million years ago
29.
Mitochondrial DNA and Ribosomal RNA Provide Two
Types of Molecular Clocks
- Different molecules have different mutation rates
- higher rate, better for studying closely related
species - lower rate, better for studying distantly related
species - Ribosomal RNA is used to study distantly related
species - many conservative regions
- lower mutation rate than most DNA
The DNA sequences from two descendant species
show mutations that have accumulated (black).
The mutation rate of this sequence equals one
mutation per ten million years.
DNA sequence from a hypothetical ancestor
30Organelle DNA as a Molecular Clock
- Mitochondrial DNA is used to study closely
related species
- Mt DNAs mutation rate is ten times faster than
that of nuclear DNA - Mt DNA is passed down unshuffled from mother to
offspring
31Using DNA as a Molecular Clock
- It is relatively easy to use DNA from living
species to draw conclusions about phylogeny and
times of divergence - It is more difficult to use DNA from museum and
fossil material - First, museum and fossil material may be
contaminated by other DNA, especially microbial
DNA - Second, fossil material is likely to have only
tiny quantities of DNA from which to work
32DNA Reveals the Aboriginal Australians Are the
First Humans to Leave Africa
- An international team of researchers has for the
first time sequenced the genome of a man who was
an Aboriginal Australian. (Science 22
September 2011) - They have shown that modern day Aboriginal
Australians are the direct descendents of the
first people who arrived on the continent some
50,000 years ago and that those ancestors left
Africa earlier than their European and Asian
counterparts. - Although there is good archaeological evidence
that shows humans in Australia around 50,000
years ago, this genome study re-writes the story
of their journey there. - The study provides good evidence that Aboriginal
Australians are descendents of the earliest
modern explorers, leaving Africa around 24,000
years before their Asian and European
counterparts. - This is contrary to the previous and most widely
accepted theory that all modern humans derive
from a single out-of-Africa migration wave into
Europe, Asia, and Australia.
The study derived from a lock of hair collected
by a British anthropologist one hundred years ago
from an Aboriginal man from the Goldfields region
of Western Australia in the early 20th century.
33The Polymerase Chain Reaction
Figure B04A The polymerase chain reaction
34Eukaryote Origins Remain Unclear
Which came first nucleus or organelle?
Other details of the transition?
35Eukaryote Characteristics
- DNA organized as linear chromosomes various
states of ploidy - many cytoplasmic membrane-bound organelles
- eukaryotic cytoskeleton and ribosomes
- presence of external cell wall - variable
- sexual reproduction predominates and various
means of gene recombination available - unicellular or multicellular
36Generalized Eukaryotic Cell (Animal)
- Plasma Membrane
- microvilli
- Cytoplasm
- Cytoplasmic Organelles
- cytoskeleton
- ribosomes
- mitochondria
- rough endoplasmic reticulum
- smooth endoplasmic reticulum
- Golgi apparatus
- lysosomes, etc.
- Nuclear Envelope with pores
- Nucleoplasm and nucleoli
- DNA in chromosomes
37Generalized Eukaryotic Cell (Plant)
- The same basic components and organelles as the
animal cell plus the addition of a cellulose cell
wall, a central vacuole, which sequesters various
chemicals, and chloroplasts that carry out
photosynthesis
38Eukaryotes Package DNA Differently
39Transcription and Translation in Prokaryotes and
Eukaryotes
- Prokaryote genes lack introns and, therefore, no
pre-mRNA processing is required - Prokaryotes have no nucleus, no separation
between DNA and the cytoplasm - Prokaryotic ribosomes are different in structure
- Methods of gene regulation differ
40Review Gene Expression
- DNA contains a sequence of nitrogenous bases
which codes for the sequence of amino acids in a
protein - A triplet code, in which each codon is composed
of 3 nitrogenous bases, forms the genetic code - During transcription
- one strand of DNA serves as a template for
formation of messenger RNA - mRNA has bases complementary to the base sequence
in the DNA - Messenger RNA is processed, with intron removal,
before leaving the nucleus
41Review Gene Expression (cont.)
- mRNA carries the codon sequence to the ribosomes
(rRNA and protein) in the cytoplasm - Each tRNA carries a particular kind of amino acid
- each tRNA also carries a 3-base anticodon which
pairs complementarily to a codon of the mRNA - During translation
- the linear sequence of codons in the mRNA
determines the order of tRNAs and their attached
amino acids - sequential peptide bond formation produces the
primary structure of the protein at the ribosome
42Oxidative Nutrient Metabolism
- Breakdown products of carbohydrates, fats, and
proteins enter various metabolic pathways where
energy is harvested - Oxygen (O2) is used up carbon dioxide (CO2) is
given off
43Nutrient Catabolism Pathways Are All
Interconnected
44Photosynthesis
45Photosynthesis
- Plant cells contain numerous chloroplasts
- In chloroplasts, light energy is used eventually
to produce energy transfer molecules, ATP and
NADP. - These energy transfer molecules power the Calvin
cycle, which in turn produces glucose - Glucose is used in cellular respiration and
starch synthesis
46Landmarks in Time
- As early as 3.5 Bya, some prokaryotes develop
early photosynthetic metabolism - 2.0 Bya eukaryotes develop from prokaryotes
by complex means including endosymbiosis - 2.0 Bya eukaryotes develop sexual
reproduction and colonial lifeforms - 1.8 Bya O2 levels rise sufficiently that the
atmosphere becomes oxidizing - 1.3 0.6 Bya multicellular (metazoan) life
evolves, perhaps several times
47almost 2 billion years of strictly unicellular
life!
48Whats Left? The Macroscopic Multicellular
Minorities
49Chapter 9End