Eukaryotes inherited inositol lipids from bacteria: implications for the models of eukaryogenesis.
Mauro Degli EspostiPublished in: FEBS letters (2023)
The merger of two very different microbes, an anaerobic archaeon and an aerobic bacterium, led to the birth of eukaryotic cells. Current models hypothesize that an archaeon engulfed bacteria through external protrusions that then fused together forming the membrane organelles of eukaryotic cells, including mitochondria. Images of cultivated Lokiarchaea sustain this concept, first proposed in the inside-out model which assumes that the membrane traffic system of archaea drove the merging with bacterial cells through membrane expansions containing inositol lipids, considered to have evolved first in archaea. This assumption has been evaluated here in detail. The data indicate that inositol lipids first emerged in bacteria, not in archaea. The implications of this finding for the models of eukaryogenesis are discussed.
Keyphrases
- induced apoptosis
- cell cycle arrest
- cell death
- oxidative stress
- healthcare
- air pollution
- endoplasmic reticulum stress
- microbial community
- deep learning
- machine learning
- signaling pathway
- pregnant women
- cell proliferation
- convolutional neural network
- heavy metals
- reactive oxygen species
- optical coherence tomography
- anaerobic digestion