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Endosymbiotic Hypothesis (Endosymbiosis) Or…”Why Chloroplasts and Mitochondria seem to have Bacterial Ancestry” Old Ideas Resurrected • 1883: Botanist by the name of Schimper notices chloroplasts resemble cyanobacteria in that they divide similarly (binary fission) • 1920: Ivan Wallin notices same thing for mitochondrion. • (nobody notices) • In 1967, Margulis offers evidence that these organelles have separate DNA from the rest of the cell (their own separate genome), and….. A Hypothesis is Born Endosymbiosis (n.): The theory (remember what theory means!) that proposes that certain organelles, including mitochondria and chloroplasts, came from free-living prokaryotes. One organism lives within the body of another and both benefit. A Hypothesis is Born Endosymbiosis (n.): A simpler prokaryotic cells was taken up by larger ones. Some of these smaller ones survived inside. The smaller ones inside evolved to become mitochondria or chloroplasts. A Hypothesis is Born Endosymbiosis (n.): Advantages: If smaller one acted like a mitochondria, the larger one got cellular energy from it. If it acted like a chloroplast, the larger one could do photosynthesis. In exchange, the mitochondria and chloroplasts found stable environment and nutrients. What’s the Evidence? 1. Organelle replication method. 2. Membrane Similarity 3. Mitochondria and Chloroplasts have their own DNA 4. Ribosome Similarity 5. Size Similarity 6. Protein Similarity What’s the Evidence? 1. Mitochondria and chloroplasts replicate differently than other organelles. – While the rest of the cell divides via mitosis, these (like bacteria), replicate by binary fission. • Binary Fission: Cell splits in half to reproduce. What’s the Evidence? 2. Membrane Similarity: – Mitochondria and chloroplasts have double membranes, and the inner membrane is made of the protein “peptidoglycan.” • Except for these organelles, only bacteria have membranes like this. What’s the Evidence? 3. Mitochondria and chloroplasts have their own set of DNA which is NOT in the nucleus (like the rest). – These sets of DNA come in circular structures called “plasmids,” just like bacterial DNA. – Statistical analysis shows it has a lot of the same bases also. What’s the Evidence? 4. Ribosomes: There are 2 kinds of ribosomes. – Eukaryotes have larger “80S” ribosomes. – Bacteria have smaller “70S” ribosomes. • Mitochondria and chloroplasts have 70S ribosomes like bacteria. What’s the Evidence? 5. There is a size similarity. – Mitochondria and chloroplasts are about the same size as their proposed prokaryotic counterparts (namely, cyanobacteria). What’s the Evidence? 6. Protein similarity. Eukaryotic proteins always start with the same amino acid: methionine. – Bacterial proteins starts with a different one: Nformylmethionine. – Proteins in mitochondria and chloroplasts all start with N-formylmethionine, too. Think Hard… • “Regular” (Nuclear) DNA comes from mommy and daddy; each contributing 50%. – Why is that? Think about how your DNA got to be where it is. Here’s Why! • Nuclear DNA is (re)produced by the process of “mitosis” (the process of cell division), starting with a fertilized egg (which had DNA from mommy’s egg and daddy’s sperm). Mom’s Contribution Only • Mitochondrial DNA is ONLY maternal. – Daddy only gave nuclear DNA. – Mitochondria came from mommy only (from the cytoplasm of the unfertilized egg). • So your mitochondrial DNA matches hers. How could this happen? In your notes, draw and label this diagram. How could this happen? Also, add the 6 pieces of evidence that support this. 1. Mitochondria and Chloroplast replicate (make copies of themselves) like bacteria. 2. Membrane Similarity with bacteria. 3. Mitochondria and Chloroplasts have their own DNA 4. Ribosome size is similar to bacteria. 5. Size of cells is similar to bacteria. 6. Proteins are similar to bacteria.