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Endosymbiosis and the origin of photosynthetic eukaryotes BY2204 Evolution Trevor Hodkinson Plant Sciences Moderatorship Recommended reading: Cambell and Reece “Biology” Origins of life; Endosymbiosis; Protists. New Scientist 17th Oct 2009 “Cradle of Life” http://www.nick-lane.net/OriginOfLife.pdf - the detail of the alkaline hydrothermal vents theory New Scientist 6 Feb 2010 p36-39 Life s a Gas – current views on how and when the levels of oxygen rose & allowed complex life. Palmer, Soltis, Chase (2004) The plant tree of life: an overview and some points of view. American Journal of Botany 91:1437-1445 Hodkinson & Parnell (2007) Reconstructing the tree of life, Chapters 1, 19, 20. 1 The History of Life 4600mya Earth formed 4000mya Life 4000 5000 million years ago 2700mya Photosynthesis starts, producing oxygen 3500mya Oldest prokaryote (?) Read more about these in the “Proof of Life” and “Life’s a gas” articles 3000 3800mya Oldest rock Refer to 1st yr notes for differences between prokaryote and eukaryote cells 2100mya Eukaryotes 543mya Cambrian Explosion 1500mya Multicellularity 2000 1000 Now Snowball Earths possibly until 650mya 3/4 of life’s history was single celled! Prokaryotes dominated most of earth’s evolutionary history All the ways of extracting energy from the world were invented by the prokaryotes Heterotrophy (= eating other organisms) Photo-autotrophy (=energy from the sun) Lithotrophy (=energy from chemical reactions e.g. H2S) Mixotrophy (= energy from any combination of the above) 2 E.g. Cyanobacteria Cyanobacteria evolved photosynthesis, i.e. splitting water to make oxygen. One group survives today as stromatolites and thrombolites off Western Australia. Fossilized ones exist from 2700mya. Oxygen is very toxic to most other bacteria, so they poisoned almost everything else. It also made an ozone atmosphere. The ozone in the atmosphere protected the land from UV light and so made it habitable They helped raise the oxygen levels to today’s levels (eventually – see “Life’s a Gas” article), allowing larger animals onto land. Zimmer 2001 3 Eukaryotes Contain membrane bound structures • Nucleus • Organelles (mitochondria and plastids) Characterised by endosymbiotic history Endosymbiosis • Symbiotic incorporation of one organism by another Eg. Unicellular alga (originaed from a eukaryotic cell engulfing a photosynthetic cyanobacterium) 4 Protoeukaryotic cell • First endosymbiotic event –uptake of an alpha-proteobacterium in to a host cell of archaea (not photosynthetic -they were heterotrophic and gave rise to all subsequent eukaryotes) Aerobic proteobacterium became mitochondria (loss of genes to nucleus) Mitochondria • Nearly all eukaryotes have them (for respiration) • Some cells have a single large one, others hundreds or thousands depending on metabolic activity • Double membrane (each a phospholipid bilayer) 5 First endosymbiotic event Plants have three genomes: • nucleus • mitochondria • plastids (chloroplast) Animals and fungi lack plastids 6 PLASTIDS plastids are structures within cells called organelles usually with lipid membranes Chloroplasts photosynthesis Chromoplasts pigment synthesis and storage Leucoplasts colourless and give rise to: Amyloplasts -starch storage・ Statoliths -for detecting gravity Elaioplasts -for storing fat Proteinoplasts -for storing and modifying protein Lots of different types but all have identical genomes PLASTIDS • Have their own genetic system - non Mendelian • Have lost many genes to the nucleus but genes still work and operate in the plastid (transit peptides help transport of translated products from the nucleus to plastid) • Plastids proliferate by division of pre-existing plastids 7 PLASTID DNA • c.113 genes • But represents one non-recombining genealogical unit rbcL • Varies in size from 120 kb to 217 kb Second endosymbiotic event cyanobacteria 8 First and second endosymbiotic Plantae events (primoplantae) Unikonts, rhizaria, excavates, chromalveolates Evidence for endosymbiosis • DNA sequences of the organelle genomes are homologous to bacteria • Replicate via splitting similar to certain prokaryotes • Inner membranes of both mitochondria and chloroplasts have enzymes and transport systems homologous to those in plasma membrane of prokaryotes 9 Endosymbiosis Plants After Lynn Margulis (1981) Symbiosis in cell evolution 1.5 bybp cyanobacteria 2.7 bybp 3.5 bybp What is a plant? Oxford dictionary definition: A living organism of the kind exemplified by trees, shrubs, herbs, grasses, ferns and mosses, typically growing in a permanent site, absorbing water and inorganic substances through its roots and synthesizing nutrients in its leaves by photosynthesis using the green pigment chlorophyll Outdated definition? 10 Dinoflagellate Chlorachniophyte Diatom Gymnosperm Apicomplexon Cryptomonad Haptophyte Glaucophyte Euglinid Red alga Green alga 11 Plants defined in a broad sense as: Organisms containing plastids How many times have plastids evolved? -Single origin looks likely although this is controversial (see Palmer et al. 2004) Single cyanobacterial primary endosymbiosis event established the three major Primoplantae lineages (green algae, red algae, glaucophytes) (not three independent events) 12 Eukaryotic tree single origin of plastids (thick green arrow) with subsequent secondary endosymbiotic events (narrow green/red arrows) Green shading=green algal symbionts Red shading=red algal symbionts Endosymbiosis dominates the evolutionary history of plants A -Primary symbionts (Primoplantae) Loss of plastid genes to nucleus. Primoplantae (=Plantae) 13 Primary plastid endosymbiosis B- Secondary symbiosis 1) Green algal symbionts* * * 14 primary endosymbiosis secondary endosymbiosis of green algae Chromalveolates 2-Red algae symbionts to create new types of plants (photosynthetic eukaryotes) Plants shaded by grey lack plastids (so did they once contained them and then lose them?) 15 Hypotheses for the origins of red algal plastids a) Single origin of red algal plastids and loss in some lineages (see Keeling 2009. J. Eukaryotic Micro.) b) Several independent origins of red algal plastids via multiple endosymbiotic events primary endosymbiosis secondary endosymbiosis of red algae 16 Chromalveolates Primoplantae Excavates Rhizaria Taxonomic implications: Algae are not a natural group (they are in 4 supergroups/divisions) Supergroup Excavates Rhizaria Primoplantae Chromalveolates Algal group Est. species number Euglenoids 800 Chlorarachniophytes 12 Charophytes (stoneworts) 20,000 Chlorophytes (greens) 120,000 Rhodophytes (reds) 20,000 Glycophytes 13 Phaeophytes (browns) 2,000 Chrysophytes (golden) 2,400 Bacillariophytes (diatoms) 200,000 Haptophytes (coccoliths) 2,000 Cryptophytes (crytomonads) 11,000 Source: Brodie and Zuccarello, in Hodkinson and Parnell (2007) (Chapter 20) 17 Green algae/green plants • Monophyletic and include embryophytes (land plants, dependent embryo) Green algae/plants 18 Conclusions • Mitochondria and chloroplasts have endosymbiotic origin • Heterotrophic eukaryotes lack chloroplasts eg.animals • Plants can be broadly defined as organisms with chloroplasts and are found in all eukaryotic supergroups (esp. Primoplantae and Chromalveolates) except unikonts (animals, fungi, slime moulds) • Lineages of plants have resulted from primary (e.g. Primoplantae) and secondary endosymbiosis of plastids (Chromalveolates, Excavates, Rhizaria) • The green algal group includes embryophytes (seed plants) Tree of life Charles Darwin 1837 Ernst Haekel 1866 www.tolweb.org/tree/ Coordinated by David Maddison 19 Land plant (embryophyte) evolution c.500mya Archaea now only survive in extreme environments where nothing else competes with them Bacteria are still common, and use a wide variety of ways of making energy, scattered across their phylogenetic tree. Only one made oxygen cyanobacteria 20