Title: Multicellularity
1Multicellularity
-
- Colonies cyanobacteria and choanoflagellates
- Sponges as organisms
2Cyanobacteria - among the oldest fossils
Stromatolite section
Stromatolites colonies of cyanobacteria
3Figure 26.3x2 Filamentous cyanobacteria from the
Bitter Springs Chert
4Figure 26.2 Clock analogy for some key events in
evolutionary history
5Figure 27.11 The cyanobacterium Anabaena and its
nitrogen-fixing heterocysts
6Development and communication in Anabaena
Crucial components need to be identified to
understand the process of heterocyst cellular
differentiation. What is the switch that commits
a cell to differentiate? How is transcription
controlled at different stages of development? Is
there a single master transcriptional regulatory
control or do several regulators work in
parallel? What mechanisms are involved in
expression of the nitrogen-fixation genes?
7Figure 26.1 Some major episodes in the history
of life
8Figure 32.8 Animal phylogeny based on sequencing
of SSU-rRNA
colonial choanoflagellate
9Enzymes typical of true animals (metazoans) are
found in their colonial protist anscestors, e.g.
tyrosine kinase is found in choanoflagellates.
tyrosine
10Multicellularity
-
- Colonies cyanobacteria and choanoflagellates
- Sponges as organisms
11Figure 33.2 Sponges
12Figure 33.3 Anatomy of a sponge
13Its whats between cells that defines
multicellularity in animals.
14Integrins are cell-surface proteins that sense
the extracellular protein (matrix) environment
and signal to the cell to control
differentiation, survival and migration of cells.
15Figure 26.2 Clock analogy for some key events in
evolutionary history
16Multicellularity
-
- Colonies cyanobacteria and choanoflagellates
- Sponges as organisms