نتایج جستجو برای: endosymbiosis

تعداد نتایج: 669  

2016
Iliona Wolfowicz Sebastian Baumgarten Philipp A. Voss Elizabeth A. Hambleton Christian R. Voolstra Masayuki Hatta Annika Guse

Symbiosis, defined as the persistent association between two distinct species, is an evolutionary and ecologically critical phenomenon facilitating survival of both partners in diverse habitats. The biodiversity of coral reef ecosystems depends on a functional symbiosis with photosynthetic dinoflagellates of the highly diverse genus Symbiodinium, which reside in coral host cells and continuousl...

2014
Chuya Shinzato Sutada Mungpakdee Nori Satoh Eiichi Shoguchi

Far more intimate knowledge of scleractinian coral biology is essential in order to understand how diverse coral-symbiont endosymbioses have been established. In particular, molecular and cellular mechanisms enabling the establishment and maintenance of obligate endosymbiosis with photosynthetic dinoflagellates require further clarification. By extension, such understanding may also shed light ...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2015
Sebastian Baumgarten Oleg Simakov Lisl Y Esherick Yi Jin Liew Erik M Lehnert Craig T Michell Yong Li Elizabeth A Hambleton Annika Guse Matt E Oates Julian Gough Virginia M Weis Manuel Aranda John R Pringle Christian R Voolstra

The most diverse marine ecosystems, coral reefs, depend upon a functional symbiosis between a cnidarian animal host (the coral) and intracellular photosynthetic dinoflagellate algae. The molecular and cellular mechanisms underlying this endosymbiosis are not well understood, in part because of the difficulties of experimental work with corals. The small sea anemone Aiptasia provides a tractable...

Journal: :Philosophical transactions of the Royal Society of London. Series B, Biological sciences 2009
Tal Dagan William Martin

Most current thinking about evolution is couched in the concept of trees. The notion of a tree with recursively bifurcating branches representing recurrent divergence events is a plausible metaphor to describe the evolution of multicellular organisms like vertebrates or land plants. But if we try to force the tree metaphor onto the whole of the evolutionary process, things go badly awry, becaus...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2004
Hwan Su Yoon Jeremiah D Hackett Claudia Ciniglia Gabriele Pinto Debashish Bhattacharya

The appearance of photosynthetic eukaryotes (algae and plants) dramatically altered the Earth's ecosystem, making possible all vertebrate life on land, including humans. Dating algal origin is, however, frustrated by a meager fossil record. We generated a plastid multi-gene phylogeny with Bayesian inference and then used maximum likelihood molecular clock methods to estimate algal divergence ti...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2006
Shenglan Li Tetyana Nosenko Jeremiah D Hackett Debashish Bhattacharya

Endosymbiosis has spread photosynthesis to many branches of the eukaryotic tree; however, the history of photosynthetic organelle (plastid) gain and loss remains controversial. Fortuitously, endosymbiosis may leave a genomic footprint through the transfer of endosymbiont genes to the "host" nucleus (endosymbiotic gene transfer, EGT). EGT can be detected through comparison of host genomes to unc...

2016
Adrian Stencel

If there is a single discipline of science calling the basic concepts of biology into question, it is without doubt microbiology. Indeed, developments in microbiology have recently forced us to rethink such fundamental concepts as the organism, individual, and genome. In this paper I show how microorganisms are changing our understanding of natural aggregations and develop the concept of a Darw...

Journal: :Biochimica et biophysica acta 2003
Stephan Berry

The bioenergetic organelles of eukaryotic cells, mitochondria and chloroplasts, are derived from endosymbiotic bacteria. Their electron transport chains (ETCs) resemble those of free-living bacteria, but were tailored for energy transformation within the host cell. Parallel evolutionary processes in mitochondria and chloroplasts include reductive as well as expansive events: On one hand, bacter...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2017
Louise A Lewis

The evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis by cyanobacteria was arguably one of the most significant biological events in Earth’s history, shaping the atmosphere and subsequently leading to diverse ecosystems (1). The permanent endosymbiotic merger between a cyanobacterium and a unicellular heterotrophic eukaryote in deep evolutionary time set the stage for the stunning diversity of photosyntheti...

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