Lecture 18 Flashcards

1
Q

What are the categories of classification?

A

Kingdom Phylum(=division) Class Order Family Genus species often intermediate taxa like subclass, subgenus… -order is of use anything above not much use

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2
Q

What does the phylogenic tree look like?

A

-based on genetic evidence!

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3
Q

What do we know about the origin of the Eukaryotic cell?

A

• 1.3 - 2 billion years before the present • mechanism of evolution is not known – nucleus and endomembrane system? – cytoskeleton? – complex cell division? – complex sexual reproduction? • There is good evidence for the origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts from primary endosymbiosis -not much known about their origin

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4
Q

What were the first eukaryotic cells to evolve?

A

The Protists - the first Eukaryotic cells to evolve were protists and they are an extremely diverse group of organisms.

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5
Q

When do eukaryotic cells first appear in the fossil record?

A

Precambrian acritarch fossils are the first known of eukaryotic cells –– about 1.3 –– 2 billion years old. -larger, some internal structure, looks like pollen grains

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6
Q

When did the first multicellular (filamentous), eukaryotic organisms appear?

A

1.4 billion years ago -maybe Grypannia= possibly a fossil alga

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7
Q

Are there any fossils of eukaryotes from pre-cambrian times?

A

-yes, recently described in phosphate mines in china

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8
Q

When can we see early seaweed fossils from?

A

-365 million years ago

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9
Q

How did eukaryotic cells evolve?

A

-primary endosymbiosis, ata a purple bacteria= mitichiondria

nucleus= invagination of membrane

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10
Q

How did nucleus and membrane bound organelles form?

A

There is no real evidence to explain the origin of the nucleus, but it probably arose by the aggregation of flattened membrane spheres around a nucleoid containing DNA and RNA. The nuclear pores remain to allow communication between the nucleus and cytoplasm (for example, to allow for the passage of RNA out of the nucleus to the cytoplasm). The membrane probably came from invaginations of the cell membrane.
What about other membrane bound organelles, specifically the mitochondria and chloroplasts? The eukaryotic cell may actually be a chimera of other cells. Double membrane bound organelles (mitochondrion & chloroplast) are probably prokaryotes living permanently inside a eukaryotic cell.
Evidence for an endosymbiotic origin of organelles is interesting, and is still accumulating in the scientific literature.

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11
Q

What isthe key evidence for endosymbiosis and the origin of mitochondria and chloroplasts?

A
  1. Mitochondria and chloroplasts are semi-autonomous, retaining their own genome (DNA, RNA). Their genomes resemble those of prokaryotes (I.e., purple bacteria, cyanobacteria)
  2. They also retain their own machinery for synthesizing proteins, including ribosomes.
  3. Their metabolism is like existing prokaryotic organisms (e.g., a cyanobacteria for chloroplast).
  4. ftsZ protein involved in division of prokaryotes and organelles
  5. Some chloroplasts still have the bacterial peptidoglycan wall between the inner and outer membranes.
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12
Q

What is secondary endosymbiosis?

A

There are organisms today that appear to be in the process of obtaining organelles, particularly chloroplasts, from other organisms. If a eukaryotic cell devours another eukaryotic cell and obtains a chloroplast from it, the process is referred to as secondary or eukaryotic endosymbiosis. An example is a cryptomonad cell, a classic protistan pirate. Other examples are the Euglenids and Chlorarachniophytes, which will be mentioned briefly.

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13
Q

Why are cyanobacteria the most interesting organisms on earth?

A

Cyanobacteria are classified within the Super Kingdom Bacteria.
1. They gave rise to an oxygenated atmosphere.
2. All chloroplasts are derived from Cyanobacteria via
endosymbiosis, a key
process in the evolution of Eukaryotic cells

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14
Q

What is panspermia?

A

-the theory that life evolved somewhere else and then came to Earth via a meteorite

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15
Q

What characteristics do cyanobacteria share with chloroplasts?

A
  1. Theirphotosyntheticthylakoids contain chlorophyll A, as do all chloroplasts.
  2. Theiraccessorypigments, phycocyanin and phycoerythrin, are found in the chloroplasts of several protists.
  3. Chloroplastgenomesshowthey are related to Cyanobacteria

typically blue/green can make them look different in a lab

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16
Q

Describe the origin of chloroplast from cyanobacteria?

A

the food vacuole breaks down eventually so only 2 membranes

17
Q

How many genomes do protist with primary and secondary endosymbiosis have?

A

Protists with primary chloroplasts have 3 genomes, while all protists with secondary chloroplasts have
either 3 or 4 genomes.

18
Q

How many times did primary endosymbiosis occur during the origin of chloroplasts?

A
  • Up until 3 years ago, molecular evidence suggested all chloroplasts arose from a single endosymbiotic event.
  • There is now a second example where primary endosymbiosis has given rise to a photosynthetic protist.
  • In both cases, the endosymbiont was a cyanobacteria.
  • The origin of the mitochondrion is less clear?
19
Q

What is the second example of primary endosymbiosis resulting in photosynthetic organelle (discovered recently)?

A

Paulinella chromatophora - An amoeba with a chloroplast (called a chromatophore)

20
Q

How many organisms have Primary chloroplasts? (i.e., are surrounded by 2 membranes)?

A
21
Q

What is secondary endosymbiosis?

A
  • The engulfed endosymbiont is a eukaryotic cell.
  • Has occurred many times.

• Has resulted in enormous diversity - the
“protistan pirates”.

• Occasionally the host cell retains more than just
the symbiont’s chloroplast (e.g., a remnant nucleus, or nucleomorph, is retained by cryptomonads and some other protists).

• Many of the worlds most important primary producers are protistan pirates (e.g., brown seaweeds and diatoms)

difference= eukaryote eats eukaryote and pirates its chloroplast(not cyanobacteria like primary endosymbiosis)= this happens all the time

22
Q

How many membranes and genomes do protistan pirates have?

A

protistan pirates! always 3 or 4 membranes- cell membrane food vacuole maybe
4 genomes-host cell, mitochondria, chloroplast and the remainder of nucelus of the eaten cell= still active

23
Q

What is a nucleomorph?

A

the almost dead nucleus of eaten cell= only in some pirates and then not true pirates

24
Q

Which species had primary endosymbiosis?

A

primary: glaucophytes, red algae, green algae, land plants

primary (another source): Paulinella

25
Q

Which species have secondary endosymbiosis?

A
  • cryptomonads, chrysophytes, phaeophytes, haptophytes, diatoms, oomycetes
  • dinoflagellates, apicomplexans
  • euglenois
  • cerchozoans
26
Q

Which primary endosymbiots provided the chlorpolast for secondary endosymbiosis?

A

Only the red algae and green algae provided chloroplasts for secondary endosymbiosis
Paulinella & Glaucophytes NOT involved in secondary endosymbiosis

27
Q

What pigments does red alga have?

A

Chl A + C plus phycoerythrin and phycocyanin

28
Q

Give an example of a protistan pirate with chloroplast form red alga.

A

Cryptomonad flagellates (pigments:Chl A + C plus phycoerythrin and phycocyanin= from red alga)

29
Q

Give an example of a protistan pirate with chloroplast form green alga.

A

Chlorarachniophytes - amoeboid protistan pirates with green algal chloroplasts (Chl A + B) that contain a nucleomorph each.

-Euglenids (photosynthetic and non-photosynthetic species exist)