Artigo Revisado por pares

A Multiple Origin for Plastids and Mitochondria

1970; American Association for the Advancement of Science; Volume: 169; Issue: 3946 Linguagem: Inglês

10.1126/science.169.3946.641

ISSN

1095-9203

Autores

Peter H. Raven,

Tópico(s)

Photosynthetic Processes and Mechanisms

Resumo

The impressive homologies between mitochondria and plastids, on the one hand, and procaryotic organisms, on the other, make it almost certain that these important cellular organelles had their origin as independent organisms. The vast number of symbiotic relationships of all degrees of evolutionary antiquity which have been found in contemporary organisms point to the ease with which such relationships can be established. In view of this, the similarities between such totally different groups as blue-green algae and red algae, dinoflagellates and brown algae, and green algae and euglenoids can best be explained by postulating an independent, symbiotic origin of the plastids in each instance. A minimum of three groups of photosynthetic procaryotes appears to be necessary to explain the relationships among contemporary Protista and green plants: (i) the blue-green algae, which possess chlorophyll a , carotenoids, and phycobilins; (ii) the "green procaryotes," a hypothetical group characterized by chlorophylls a and b and a distinctive assemblage of carotenoid accessory pigments, but not phycobilins; and (iii) the "yellow procaryotes," a second hypothetical group whose members had chlorophylls a and c and various carotenoids but not phycobilins. There is, however, no reason to think that only three kinds of organisms were involved; numerous symbiotic events presumably occurred in each of these lines. The "green procaryotes" and "yellow procaryotes" survive today only as chloroplasts from which the characteristics of the original, free-living forms can be deduced only in part. Hybridization between selected plastid DNA's may be helpful in unraveling this story, and is likewise suggested as the key to understanding the relationship between the blue-green algae and the chloroplasts of the red algae and cryptomonads. It is postulated that the symbiotic organisms have lost various functions to the nucleus in the course of evolutionary time. If mitochondria and plastids have had a multiple origin, as suggested here, it will be necessary to examine the division of function between the two subsets of DNA for a wide variety of organisms before valid conclusions can be obtained.

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