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by Staff Writers Vienna, Austria (SPX) May 13, 2015
How did the first complex eukaryotic cells with their organelles develop from simple prokaryotes, i.e. bacteria or archaea? This is a highly debated topic in evolutionary research but the question remains largely unresolved. Genomic research has shown that the organelles delivering energy in eukaryotic cells stem from an early bacterial symbiont. Since Archaea have also played an important role in the evolution of eukaryotes, current models suggested, that a primordial Archaeon might have engulfed a bacterium and in this event transformed into a complex eukaryotic cell. "With the discovery of Lokiarchaeota a missing link in this scenario has been found", says Christa Schleper from the University of Vienna.
Surprises from the genome In addition, the genome of Lokiarchaeota reveals an unexpected complexity: It contains the genetic information for some proteins that were earlier only known from eukaryotes. Some of these proteins are responsible for membrane remodeling and for the formation of a cytoskeleton that determines the shape of a eukaryotic cell. "Exactly those features were needed by the primordial cell or primordial Archaeon to engulf a bacterium in the early stages of eukaryotic evolution", says Anja Spang, one of the first authors of this study, who recently completed her PhD at the University of Vienna and now analysed the Loki genome in the group of Thijs Ettema in Uppsala.
The last common ancestor Anja Spang, Jimmy H. Saw, Steffen L. Jorgensen, Katarzyna Zaremba-Niedzwiedzka, Joran Martijn, Anders E. Lind, Roel van Eijk ,Christa Schleper, Lionel Guy and Thijs J.G. Ettema: Complex archaea that bridge the gap between prokaryotes and eukaryotes. In: Nature 2015 DOI: 10.1038/nature14447
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