Water is heated in a closed apparatus containing CH4, NH3, and H2, and an electric discharge is passed through the vaporized mixture. Organic compounds accumulate in the U-tube trap.
All living creatures are made of cells - small membrane-bounded compartments filled with a concentrated aqueous solution of chemicals. The simplest forms of life are solitary cells that propagate by dividing in two. Higher organisms, such as ourselves, are like cellular cities in which groups of cells perform specialized functions and are linked by intricate systems of communication. Cells occupy a halfway point in the scale of biological complexity. We study them to learn, on the one hand, how they are made from molecules and, on the other, how they cooperate to make an organism as complex as a human being.
All organisms, and all of the cells that constitute them, are believed to have descended from a common ancestor cell through evolution by natural selection. This involves two essential processes: (1) the occurrence of random variation in the genetic information passed from an individual to its descendants and (2) selection in favor of genetic information that helps its possessors to survive and propagate. Evolution is the central principle of biology, helping us to make sense of the bewildering variety in the living world.
This chapter, like the book as a whole, is concerned with the progression from molecules to multicellular organisms. It discusses the evolution of the cell, first as a living unit constructed from smaller parts and then as a building block for larger structures. Through evolution, we introduce the cell components and activities that are to be treated in detail, in broadly similar sequence, in the chapters that follow. Beginning with the origins of the first cell on earth, we consider how the properties of certain types of large molecules allow hereditary information to be transmitted and expressed and permit evolution to occur. Enclosed in a membrane, these molecules provide the essentials of a self-replicating cell. Following this, we describe the major transition that occurred in the course of evolution, from small bacteriumlike cells to much larger and more complex cells such as are found in present-day plants and animals. Lastly, we suggest ways in which single free-living cells might have given rise to large multicellular organisms, becoming specialized and cooperating in the formation of such intricate organs as the brain.
Clearly, there are dangers in introducing the cell through its evolution: the large gaps in our knowledge can be filled only by speculations that are liable to be wrong in many details. We cannot go back in time to witness the unique molecular events that took place billions of years ago. But those ancient events have left many traces for us to analyze. Ancestral plants, animals, and even bacteria are preserved as fossils. Even more important, every modern organism provides evidence of the character of living organisms in the past. Present-day biological molecules, in particular, are a rich source of information about the course of evolution, revealing fundamental similarities between the most disparate of living organisms and allowing us to map out the differences between them on an objective universal scale. These molecular similarities and differences present us with a problem like that which confronts the literary scholar who seeks to establish the original text of an ancient author by comparing a mass of variant manuscripts that have been corrupted through repeated copying and editing. The task is hard, and the evidence is incomplete, but it is possible at least to make intelligent guesses about the major stages in the evolution of living cells.
The conditions that existed on the earth in its first billion years are still a matter of dispute. Was the surface initially molten? Did the atmosphere contain ammonia, or methane? Everyone seems to agree, however, that the earth was a violent place with volcanic eruptions, lightning, and torrential rains. There was little if any free oxygen and no layer of ozone to absorb the ultraviolet radiation from the sun. The radiation, by its photochemical action, may have helped to keep the atmosphere rich in reactive molecules and far from chemical equilibrium.
Water is heated in a closed apparatus containing CH4, NH3, and H2, and an electric discharge is passed through the vaporized mixture. Organic compounds accumulate in the U-tube trap.
Compounds shown in color are important components of present-day living cells.
Although such experiments cannot reproduce the early conditions on the earth exactly, they make it plain that the formation of organic molecules is surprisingly easy. And the developing earth had immense advantages over any human experimenter; it was very large and could produce a wide spectrum of conditions. But above all, it had much more time - tens to hundreds of millions of years. In such circumstances it seems very likely that, at some time and place, many of the simple organic molecules found in present-day cells accumulated in high concentrations.
Simple organic molecules such as amino acids and nucleotides can associate to form polymers. One amino acid can join with another by forming a peptide bond, and two nucleotides can join together by a phosphodiester bond. The repetition of these reactions leads to linear polymers known as polypeptides and polynucleotides, respectively. In present-day living cells, large polypeptides - known as proteins - and polynucleotides - in the form of both ribonucleic acids (RNA) and deoxyribonucleic acids (DNA)are commonly viewed as the most important constituents. A restricted set of 20 amino acids constitute the universal building blocks of the proteins, while RNA and DNA molecules are constructed from just four types of nucleotides each. Although it is uncertain why these particular sets of monomers were selected for biosynthesis in preference to others that are chemically similar, we shall see that the chemical properties of the corresponding polymers suit them especially well for their specific roles in the cell.
Nucleotides of four kinds (here represented by the single letters A, U, G, and C) can undergo spontaneous polymerization with the loss of water. The product is a mixture of polynucleotides that are random in length and sequence. Similarly, amino acids of different types, symbolized here by three-letter abbreviated names, can polymerize with one another to form polypeptides. Present-day proteins are built from a standard set of 20 types of amino acids.
The origin of life requires that in an assortment of such molecules there must have been some possessing, if only to a small extent, a crucial property: the ability to catalyze reactions that lead, directly or indirectly, to production of more molecules of the catalyst itself. Production of catalysts with this special self-promoting property would be favored, and the molecules most efficient in aiding their own production would divert raw materials from the production of other substances. In this way one can envisage the gradual development of an increasingly complex chemical system of organic monomers and polymers that function together to generate more molecules of the same types, fueled by a supply of simple raw materials in the environment. Such an autocatalytic system would have some of the properties we think of as characteristic of living matter: it would comprise a far from random selection of interacting molecules; it would tend to reproduce itself; it would compete with other systems dependent on the same feedstocks; and if deprived of its feedstocks or maintained at a wrong temperature that upsets the balance of reaction rates, it would decay toward chemical equilibrium and "die."
But what molecules could have had such autocatalytic properties? In present-day living cells the most versatile catalysts are polypeptides, composed of many different amino acids with chemically diverse side chains and, consequently, able to adopt diverse three-dimensional forms that bristle with reactive sites. But although polypeptides are versatile as catalysts, there is no known way in which one such molecule can reproduce itself by directly specifying the formation of another of precisely the same sequence.
Preferential binding occurs between pairs of nucleotides (G with C and U with A) by relatively weak chemical bonds (above). This pairing enables one polynucleotide to act as a template for the synthesis of another (left).
In step 1 the original RNA molecule acts as a template to form an RNA molecule of complementary sequence. In step 2 this complementary RNA molecule itself acts as a template, forming RNA molecules of the original sequence. Since each templating molecule can produce many copies of the complementary strand, these reactions can result in the "multiplication" of the original sequence.
Such complementary templating mechanisms are elegantly simple, and they lie at the heart of information transfer processes in biological systems. Genetic information contained in every cell is encoded in the sequences of nucleotides in its polynucleotide molecules, and this information is passed on (inherited) from generation to generation by means of complementary base-pairing interactions.
Templating mechanisms, however, require additional catalysts to promote polymerization; without these the process is slow and inefficient and other, competing reactions prevent the formation of accurate replicas. Today, the catalytic functions that polymerize nucleotides are provided by highly specialized catalytic proteinsthat is, by enzymes. In the "prebiotic soup" primitive polypeptides might perhaps have provided some catalytic help. But molecules with the appropriate catalytic specificity would have remained rare unless the RNA itself were able somehow to reciprocate and favor their production. We shall come back to the reciprocal relationship between RNA synthesis and protein synthesis, which is crucially important in all living cells. But let us first consider what could be done with RNA itself, for RNA molecules can have a variety of catalytic properties, besides serving as templates for their own replication. In particular, an RNA molecule with an appropriate nucleotide sequence can act as catalyst for the accurate replication of another RNA molecule - the template - whose sequence can be arbitrary. The special versatility of RNA molecules is thought to have enabled them to play a central role in the origin of life.
Nucleotide pairing between different regions of the same polynucleotide (RNA) chain causes the molecule to adopt a distinctive shape.
The three-dimensional folded structure of a polynucleotide affects its stability, its actions on other molecules, and its ability to replicate, so that not all polynucleotide shapes will be equally successful in a replicating mixture. Moreover, errors inevitably occur in any copying process, and imperfect copies of the originals will be propagated. With repeated replication, therefore, new variant sequences of nucleotides will be continually generated. Thus, in laboratory studies, replicating systems of RNA molecules have been shown to undergo a form of natural selection in which different favorable sequences eventually predominate, depending on the exact conditions. Most important, RNA molecules can be selected for the ability to bind almost any other molecule specifically. This too has been shown, in experiments in vitro that begin with a preparation of short RNA molecules with random nucleotide sequences manufactured artificially. These are passed down a column packed with beads to which some chosen substance is bonded. RNA molecules that fail to bind to the chosen substance are washed through the column and discarded; those few that bind are retained and used as templates to direct production of multiple copies of their own sequences. This new RNA preparation, enriched in sequences that bind the chosen substance, is then used as the starting material for a repetition of the procedure. After several such cycles of selection and reproduction, the RNA is found to consist of multiple copies of a relatively small number of sequences, each of which binds the test substance quite specifically.
An RNA molecule therefore has two special characteristics: it carries information encoded in its nucleotide sequence that it can pass on by the process of replication, and it has a specific folded structure that enables it to interact selectively with other molecules and determines how it will respond to the ambient conditions. These two features - one informational, the other functional - are the two properties essential for evolution. The nucleotide sequence of an RNA molecule is analogous to the genotype - the hereditary information - of an organism. The folded three-dimensional structure is analogous to the phenotype - the expression of the genetic information on which natural selection operates.
Natural selection depends on the environment, and for a replicating RNA molecule a critical component of the environment is the set of other RNA molecules in the mixture. Besides acting as templates for their own replication, these can catalyze the breakage and formation of covalent bonds between nucleotides. For example, some specialized RNA molecules can catalyze a change in other RNA molecules, cutting the nucleotide sequence at a particular point; and other types of RNA molecules spontaneously cut out a portion of their own nucleotide sequence and rejoin the cut ends (a process known as self-splicing). Each RNA-catalyzed reaction depends on a specific arrangement of atoms that forms on the surface of the catalytic RNA molecule (the ribozyme), causing particular chemical groups on one or more of its nucleotides to become highly reactive.
Certain catalytic activities would have had a cardinal importance in the primordial soup. Consider in particular an RNA molecule that helps to catalyze the process of templated polymerization, taking any given RNA molecule as template. (This ribozyme activity has been directly demonstrated in vitro, albeit in a rudimentary form.) Such a molecule, by acting on copies of itself, can replicate with heightened speed and efficiency (Figure 1-7
There are strong suggestions, therefore, that between 3.5 and 4 billion years ago, somewhere on earth, self-replicating systems of RNA molecules, mixed with other organic molecules including simple polypeptides, began the process of evolution. Systems with different sets of polymers competed for the available precursor materials to construct copies of themselves, just as organisms now compete; success depended on the accuracy and the speed with which the copies were made and on the stability of those copies.
However, as we emphasized earlier, while the structure of polynucleotides is well suited for information storage and replication, their catalytic abilities are limited by comparison with those of polypeptides, and efficient replication of polynucleotides in modern cells is absolutely dependent on proteins. At the origin of life any polynucleotide that helped guide the synthesis of a useful polypeptide in its environment would have had a great advantage in the evolutionary struggle for survival.
Today, these events in the assembly of new proteins take place on the surface of ribosomes - complex particles composed of several large RNA molecules of yet another class, together with more than 50 different types of protein. In Chapter 5 we shall see that the ribosomal RNA in these particles plays a central catalytic role in the process of protein synthesis and forms more than 60% of the ribosome's mass. At least in evolutionary terms, it appears to be the fundamental component of the ribosome.
It seems likely, then, that RNA guided the primordial synthesis of proteins, perhaps in a clumsy and primitive fashion. In this way RNA was able to create tools - in the form of proteins - for more efficient biosynthesis, and some of these could have been put to use in the replication of RNA and in the process of tool production itself.
The synthesis of specific proteins under the guidance of RNA required the evolution of a code by which the polynucleotide sequence specifies the amino acid sequence that makes up the protein. This code - the genetic code - is spelled out in a "dictionary" of three-letter words: different triplets of nucleotides encode specific amino acids. The code seems to have been selected arbitrarily (subject to some constraints, perhaps); yet it is virtually the same in all living organisms. This strongly suggests that all present-day cells have descended from a single line of primitive cells that evolved the mechanism of protein synthesis.
Because these molecules have hydrophilic heads and lipophilic tails, they will align themselves at an oil-water interface with their heads in the water and their tails in the oil. In water they will associate to form closed bilayer vesicles in which the lipophilic tails are in contact with one another and the hydrophilic heads are exposed to the water.
Presumably, the first membrane-bounded cells were formed by spontaneous assembly of phospholipid molecules from the prebiotic soup, enclosing a self-replicating mixture of RNA and other molecules. It is not clear at what point in the evolution of biological catalysts and protein synthesis this first occurred. In any case, once RNA molecules were sealed within a closed membrane, they could begin to evolve in earnest as carriers of genetic instructions: they could be selected not merely on the basis of their own structure, but also according to their effect on the other molecules in the same compartment. The nucleotide sequences of the RNA molecules could now be expressed in the character of a unitary living cell.
The picture we have presented is, of course, speculative: there are no fossil records that trace the origins of the first cell. Nevertheless, there is persuasive evidence from present-day organisms and from experiments that the broad features of this evolutionary story are correct. The prebiotic synthesis of small molecules, the self-replication of catalytic RNA molecules, the translation of RNA sequences into amino acid sequences, and the assembly of lipid molecules to form membrane-bounded compartments - all presumably occurred to generate primitive cells 3.5 to 4 billion years ago.
(Courtesy of Jeremy Burgess.)
The first cells on the earth were presumably less sophisticated than a mycoplasma and less efficient in reproducing themselves. There was, however, a more fundamental difference between these primitive cells and a mycoplasma, or indeed any other present-day cell: the hereditary information in all cells alive today is stored in DNA rather than in the RNA that is thought to have stored the hereditary information during the earliest stages of evolution. Both types of polynucleotides are found in present-day cells, but they function in a collaborative manner, each having evolved to perform specialized tasks. Small chemical differences fit the two kinds of molecules for distinct functions. DNA acts as the permanent repository of genetic information, and, unlike RNA, it is found in cells principally in a double-stranded form, composed of a pair of complementary polynucleotide molecules. This double-stranded structure makes DNA in cells more robust and stable than RNA; it also makes DNA relatively easy to replicate (as will be explained in Chapter 3) and permits a repair mechanism to operate that uses the intact strand as a template for the correction or repair of the associated damaged strand. DNA guides the synthesis of specific RNA molecules, again by the principle of complementary base-pairing, though now this pairing is between slightly different types of nucleotides. The resulting single-stranded RNA molecules then perform two primeval functions: they direct protein synthesis both as coding RNA molecules (messenger RNAs) and as RNA catalysts (ribosomal and other nonmessenger RNAs).
Today, DNA is the repository of genetic information and RNA acts largely as a go-between to direct protein synthesis.
Living cells probably arose on earth about 3.5 billion years ago by spontaneous reactions between molecules in an environment that was far from chemical equilibrium. From our knowledge of present-day organisms and the molecules they contain, it seems likely that the development of the directly autocatalytic mechanisms fundamental to living systems began with the evolution of families of RNA molecules that could catalyze their own replication. With time, one of these families of cooperating RNA catalysts developed the ability to direct synthesis of polypeptides. Finally, as the accumulation of additional protein catalysts allowed more efficient and complex cells to evolve, the DNA double helix replaced RNA as a more stable molecule for storing the increased amounts of genetic information required by such cells.
It is thought that all organisms living now on earth derive from a single primordial cell born more than 3 billion years ago. This cell, out-reproducing its competitors, took the lead in the process of cell division and evolution that eventually covered the earth with green, changed the composition of its atmosphere, and made it the home of intelligent life. The family resemblances among all organisms seem too strong to be explained in any other way. One important landmark along this evolutionary road occurred about 1.5 billion years ago, when there was a transition from small cells with relatively simple internal structures - the so-called procaryotic cells, which include the various types of bacteria - to a flourishing of larger and radically more complex eucaryotic cells such as are found in higher animals and plants.
(A) Some procaryotic cells drawn to scale. (B) Electron micrograph of a longitudinal section through a bacterium (Escherichia coli); the cell's DNA is concentrated in the palely stained region. (Courtesy of E. Kellenberger.)
Bacteria are small and can replicate quickly, simply dividing in two by binary fission. When food is plentiful, "survival of the fittest" generally means survival of those that can divide the fastest. Under optimal conditions a single procaryotic cell can divide every 20 minutes and thereby give rise to 5 billion cells (approximately equal to the present human population on earth) in less than 11 hours. The ability to divide quickly enables populations of bacteria to adapt rapidly to changes in their environment. Under laboratory conditions, for example, a population of bacteria maintained in a large vat will evolve within a few weeks by spontaneous mutation and natural selection to utilize new types of sugar molecules as carbon sources.
Arrows indicate probable paths of evolution. The origin of eucaryotic cells is discussed later in the text.
There are species of bacteria that can utilize virtually any type of organic molecule as food, including sugars, amino acids, fats, hydrocarbons, polypeptides, and polysaccharides. Some are even able to obtain their carbon atoms from CO2 and their nitrogen atoms from N2. Despite their relative simplicity, bacteria have existed for longer than any other organisms and still are the most abundant type of cell on earth.
A bacterium growing in a salt solution containing a single type of carbon source, such as glucose, must carry out a large number of chemical reactions. Not only must it derive from the glucose the chemical energy needed for many vital processes, it must also use the carbon atoms of glucose to synthesize every type of organic molecule that the cell requires. These reactions are catalyzed by hundreds of enzymes working in reaction "chains" so that the product of one reaction is the substrate for the next; such enzymatic chains, called metabolic pathways, will be discussed in the following chapter.
(A) The cell on the left is provided with a supply of related substances (A, B, C, and D) produced by prebiotic synthesis. One of these, substance D, is metabolically useful. As the cell exhausts the available supply of D, a selective advantage is obtained by the evolution of a new enzyme that is able to produce D from the closely related substance C. Fundamentally important metabolic pathways may have evolved by a series of similar steps. (B) On the right, a metabolically useful compound A is available in abundance. An enzyme appears in the course of evolution that, by chance, has the ability to convert substance A to substance B. Other changes then occur within the cell that enable it to make use of the new substance. The appearance of further enzymes can build up a long chain of reactions.
If metabolic pathways evolved by the sequential addition of new enzymatic reactions to existing ones, the most ancient reactions should, like the oldest rings in a tree trunk, be closest to the center of the "metabolic tree," where the most fundamental of the basic molecular building blocks are synthesized. This position in metabolism is firmly occupied by the chemical processes that involve sugar phosphates, among which the most central of all is probably the sequence of reactions known as glycolysis, by which glucose can be degraded in the absence of oxygen (that is, anaerobically). The oldest metabolic pathways would have had to be anaerobic because there was no free oxygen in the atmosphere of the primitive earth. Glycolysis occurs in virtually every living cell and drives the formation of the compound adenosine triphosphate, or ATP, which is used by all cells as a versatile source of chemical energy. Certain thioester compounds play a fundamental role in the energy-transfer reactions of glycolysis and in a host of other basic biochemical processes in which two organic molecules (a thiol and a carboxylic acid) are joined by a high-energy bond involving sulfur (Figure 1-15
Linked to the core reactions of glycolysis are hundreds of other chemical processes. Some of these are responsible for the synthesis of small molecules, many of which in turn are utilized in further reactions to make the large polymers specific to the organism. Other reactions are used to degrade complex molecules, taken in as food, into simpler chemical units. One of the most striking features of these metabolic reactions is that they take place similarly in all kinds of organisms, suggesting an extremely ancient origin.
These genes contain highly conserved sequences, which change so slowly that they can be used to measure phylogenetic relationships spanning the entire range of living organisms. The data suggest that the plant, animal, and fungal lineages diverged from a common ancestor relatively late in the history of eucaryotic cells. Halobacterium and E. coli are procaryotes; the rest are eucaryotes. Giardia, microsporidians, trypanosomes, Euglena, and ciliated protozoans are protists (single-cell eucaryotes). (Adapted from M.L. Sogin, J.H. Gunderson, H.J. Elwood, R.A. Alonso, and D.A. Peattie, Science 243:75-77, 1989. © 1989 the AAAS.)
As competition for the raw materials for organic syntheses intensified, a strong selective advantage would have been gained by any organisms able to utilize carbon and nitrogen atoms (in the form of CO2 and N2) directly from the atmosphere. But while they are abundantly available, CO2 and N2 are also very stable. It therefore requires a large amount of energy as well as a number of complicated chemical reactions to convert them to a usable form - that is, into organic molecules such as simple sugars.
In the case of CO2 the major mechanism that evolved to achieve this transformation was photosynthesis, in which radiant energy captured from the sun drives the conversion of CO2 into organic compounds. The interaction of sunlight with a pigment molecule, chlorophyll, excites an electron to a more highly energized state. As the electron drops back to a lower energy level, the energy it gives up drives chemical reactions that are facilitated and directed by protein molecules.
One of the first sunlight-driven reactions was probably the generation of "reducing power." The carbon and nitrogen atoms in atmospheric CO2 and N2 are in an oxidized and inert state. One way to make them more reactive, so that they participate in biosynthetic reactions, is to reduce them - that is, to give them a larger number of electrons. This is achieved in several steps. In the first step electrons are removed from a poor electron donor and transferred to a strong electron donor by chlorophyll in a reaction that is driven by sunlight. The strong electron donor is then used to reduce CO2 or N2. Comparison of the mechanisms of photosynthesis in various present-day bacteria suggests that one of the first sources of electrons was H2S, from which the primary waste product would have been elemental sulfur. Later the more difficult but ultimately more rewarding process of obtaining electrons from H2O was accomplished, and O2 was released in large amounts as a waste product.
Cyanobacteria (also known as blue-green algae) are today a major route by which both carbon and nitrogen are converted into organic molecules and thus enter the biosphere. They include the most self-sufficient organisms that now exist. Able to "fix" both CO2 and N2 into organic molecules, they are, to a first approximation, able to live on water, air, and sunlight alone; the mechanisms by which they do this have probably remained essentially constant for several billion years. Together with other bacteria that have some of these capabilities, they created the conditions in which more complex types of organisms could evolve: once one set of organisms had succeeded in synthesizing the whole gamut of organic cell components from inorganic raw materials, other organisms could subsist by feeding on the primary synthesizers and on their products.
The relationship between changes in atmospheric oxygen levels and some of the major stages that are believed to have occurred during the evolution of living organisms on earth. As indicated, geological evidence suggests that there was more than a billion-year delay between the rise of cyanobacteria (thought to be the first organisms to release oxygen) and the time that high oxygen levels began to accumulate in the atmosphere. This delay is thought to have been due largely to the rich supply of dissolved ferrous iron in the oceans, which reacted with the released oxygen to form enormous iron oxide deposits.
Since oxygen is an extremely reactive chemical that can interact with most cytoplasmic constituents, it must have been toxic to many early organisms, just as it is to many present-day anaerobic bacteria. However, this reactivity also provides a source of chemical energy, and, not surprisingly, this has been exploited by organisms during the course of evolution. By using oxygen, organisms are able to oxidize more completely the molecules they ingest. For example, in the absence of oxygen glucose can be broken down only to lactic acid or ethanol, the end products of anaerobic glycolysis. But in the presence of oxygen glucose can be completely degraded to CO2 and H2O. In this way much more energy can be derived from each gram of glucose. The energy released in respiration - the aerobic oxidation of food molecules - is used to drive the synthesis of ATP in much the same way that photosynthetic organisms produce ATP from the energy of sunlight. In both processes there is a series of electron-transfer reactions that generates an H+ gradient between the outside and inside of a membrane-bounded compartment; the H+ gradient then serves to drive the synthesis of the ATP. Today, respiration is used by the great majority of organisms, including most procaryotes.
As molecular oxygen accumulated in the atmosphere, what happened to the remaining anaerobic organisms with which life had begun? In a world that was rich in oxygen, which they could not use, they were at a severe disadvantage. Some, no doubt, became extinct. Others either developed a capacity for respiration or found niches in which oxygen was largely absent, where they could continue an anaerobic way of life. Others became predators or parasites on aerobic cells. And some, it seems, hit upon a strategy for survival more cunning and vastly richer in implications for the future: they are believed to have formed an intimate association with an aerobic type of cell, living with it in symbiosis. This is the most plausible explanation for the metabolic organization of present-day cells of the eucaryotic type (Panel 1-1, pp. 18-19) with which this book will be chiefly concerned.
The nucleus contains most of the DNA of the eucaryotic cell. It is seen here in a thin section of a mammalian cell examined in the electron microscope. How and why the nucleus originated is uncertain; some speculations on its origin are presented in Figure 12-5. (Courtesy of Daniel S. Friend.)
The extensive system of internal membranes can be seen in this electron micrograph of a chloroplast in a moss cell. The flattened sacs of membrane contain chlorophyll and are arranged in stacks, or grana. This chloroplast also contains large accumulations of starch. (Courtesy of Jeremy Burgess.)
Mitochondria carry out the oxidative degradation of nutrient molecules in almost all eucaryotic cells. As seen in this electron micrograph, they possess a smooth outer membrane and a highly convoluted inner mem-brane. (Courtesy of Daniel S. Friend.)
(A) Drawing, as seen in the light microscope. (B) Electron micrograph of a cross-section through the broad, flattened body of the cell. Giardia is thought to be one of the most primitive types of eucaryotic cell. It is nucleated (in fact, it has, strangely, two identical nuclei), it possesses a cytoskeleton with actin and tubulin, and it moves by means of typical eucaryotic flagella containing microtubules; but it has no mitochondria or chloroplasts and no normal endoplasmic reticulum or Golgi apparatus. Nucleotide sequencing studies indicate that it is related almost as closely to bacteria as it is to other eucaryotes, from which it must have diverged very early in evolution. Giardia lives as a parasite in the gut and can cause disease in humans. (A, after G.D. Schmidt and L.S. Roberts, Foundations of Parasitology, 4th Ed. St Louis: Times Mirror/Mosby, 1989; B, courtesy of Dennis Feely.)
Acquisition of mitochondria must have had many repercussions. The plasma membrane, for example, is heavily committed to energy metabolism in procaryotic cells but not in eucaryotic cells, where this crucial function has been relegated to the mitochondria. It seems likely that the separation of functions left the eucaryotic plasma membrane free to evolve important new features. In particular, because eucaryotic cells need not maintain a large H+ gradient across their plasma membrane, as required for ATP production in procaryotes, it became possible to use controlled changes in the ion permeability of the plasma membrane for cell-signaling purposes. Thus, a variety of ion channels appeared in the eucaryotic plasma membrane. Today, these channels mediate the elaborate electrical signaling processes in higher organisms - notably in the nervous system -and they control much of the behavior of single-celled free-living eucaryotes such as protozoa (see below).
The two organisms are known jointly as Cyanophora paradoxa. The "cyano-bacterium" is in the process of dividing. (Courtesy of Jeremy D. Pickett-Heaps.)
The time of origin of the eucaryotic nucleus in relation to the time of branching of the eucaryotic lineage from archaebacteria and eubacteria is not known.
| Procaryotes | Eucaryotes | |
|---|---|---|
| Organisms | bacteria and cyanobacteria | protists, fungi, plants, and animals |
| Cell size | generally 1 to 10 μm in linear dimension | generally 5 to 100 μm in linear dimension |
| Metabolism | anaerobic or aerobic | aerobic |
| Organelles | few or none | nucleus, mitochondria, chloroplasts, endoplasmic reticulum, etc. |
| DNA | circular DNA in cytoplasm | very long linear DNA molecules containing many noncoding regions; bounded by nuclear envelope |
| RNA and protein | RNA and protein synthesized in same compartment | RNA synthesized and processed in nucleus; proteins synthesized in cytoplasm |
| Cytoplasm | no cytoskeleton: cytoplasmic streaming, endocytosis, and exocytosis all absent | cytoskeleton composed of protein filaments; cytoplasmic streaming; endocytosis and exocytosis |
| Cell division | chromosomes pulled apart by attachments to plasma membrane | chromosomes pulled apart by cytoskeletal spindle apparatus |
| Cellular organization | mainly unicellular | mainly multicellular, with differentiation of many types |
Eucaryotic cells are usually much larger in volume than procaryotic cells, commonly by a factor of 1000 or more, and they carry a proportionately larger quantity of most cellular materials; for example, a human cell contains about 1000 times as much DNA as a typical bacterium. This large size creates problems. Since all the raw materials for the biosynthetic reactions occurring in the interior of a cell must ultimately enter and leave by passing through the plasma membrane covering its surface, and since the membrane is also the site of many important reactions, an increase in cell volume requires an increase in cell surface. But it is a fact of geometry that simply scaling up a structure increases the volume as the cube of the linear dimension while the surface area increases only as the square. Therefore, if the large eucaryotic cell is to keep as high a ratio of surface to volume as the procaryotic cell, it must supplement its surface area by means of convolutions, infoldings, and other elaborations of its membrane.
Electron micrograph of a thin section of a mammalian cell showing both smooth and rough regions of the endoplasmic reticulum (ER). The smooth regions are involved in lipid metabolism; the rough regions, studded with ribosomes, are sites of synthesis of proteins that are destined to leave the cytosol and enter certain other compartments of the cell. (Courtesy of George Palade.)
All of the aforementioned membranous structures lie in the interior of the cell. How, then, can they help to solve the problem we posed at the outset and provide the cell with a surface area that is adequate to its large volume? The answer is that there is a continual exchange between the internal membrane-bounded compartments and the outside of the cell, achieved by endocytosis and exocytosis, processes unique to eucaryotic cells. In endocytosis portions of the external surface membrane invaginate and pinch off to form membrane-bounded cytoplasmic vesicles that contain both substances present in the external medium and molecules previously adsorbed on the cell surface. Very large particles or even entire foreign cells can be taken up by phagocytosis - a special form of endocytosis. Exocytosis is the reverse process, whereby membrane-bounded vesicles inside the cell fuse with the plasma membrane and release their contents into the external medium. In this way membranes surrounding compartments deep inside the cell serve to increase the effective surface area of the cell for exchanges of matter with the external world.
As we shall see in later chapters, the various membranes and membrane-bounded compartments in eucaryotic cells have become highly specialized - some for secretion, some for absorption, some for specific biosynthetic processes, and so on.
A network of actin filaments underlying the plasma membrane of an animal cell is seen in this electron micrograph prepared by the deep-etch technique. (Courtesy of John Heuser.)
Actin filaments and microtubules are also essential for the internal movements that occur in the cytoplasm of all eucaryotic cells. Thus microtubules in the form of a mitotic spindle are a vital part of the usual machinery for partitioning DNA equally between the two daughter cells when a eucaryotic cell divides. Without microtubules, therefore, the eucaryotic cell could not reproduce. In this and other examples movement by free diffusion would be either too slow or too haphazard to be useful. In fact, most of the organelles in a eucaryotic cell appear to be attached, directly or indirectly, to the cytoskeleton and, when they move, to be propelled along cytoskeletal tracks.
These drawings are done to different scales, but in each case the bar denotes 10 mm. The organisms in (A), (B), (E), (F), and (I) are ciliates; (C) is an euglenoid; (D) is an amoeba; (G) is a dinoflagellate; (H) is a heliozoan. (From M.A. Sleigh, The Biology of Protozoa. London: Edward Arnold, 1973.)
Ciliates are single-cell animals that show an amazing diversity of form and behavior. The top micrograph shows Didinium, a ciliated protozoan with two circumferential rings of motile cilia and a snoutlike protuberance at its leading end, with which it captures its prey. In the bottom micrograph Didinium is shown engulfing another protozoan, Paramecium. (Courtesy of D. Barlow.)
Predatory behavior of this sort and the set of features on which it depends - large size, the capacity for phagocytosis, and the ability to move in pursuit of prey - are peculiar to eucaryotes. Indeed, it is probable that these features came very early in eucaryotic evolution, making possible the subsequent capture of bacteria and their domestication as mitochondria and chloroplasts.
An animal cell is shown on the left and a plant cell on the right. The nuclear envelope has broken down, and the DNA, having replicated, has condensed into two complete sets of chromosomes. One set is distributed to each of the two newly forming cells by a mitotic spindle composed largely of microtubules.
The membranes enclosing the nucleus in eucaryotic cells further protect the structure of the DNA and its associated control machinery, sheltering them from entanglement with the moving cytoskeleton and from many of the chemical changes that take place in the cytoplasm. They also allow the segregation of two crucial steps in the expression of genetic information: (1) the copying of DNA sequences into RNA sequences (DNA transcription) and (2) the use of these RNA sequences, in turn, to direct the synthesis of specific proteins (RNA translation). In procaryotic cells there is no compartmentalization of these processes - the translation of RNA sequences into protein begins as soon as they are transcribed, even before their synthesis is completed. In eucaryotes, however (except in mitochondria and chloroplasts, which in this respect as in others are closer to bacteria), the two steps in the path from gene to protein are kept strictly separate: transcription occurs in the nucleus, translation in the cytoplasm. The RNA has to leave the nucleus before it can be used to guide protein synthesis. While in the nucleus it undergoes elaborate changes in which some parts of the RNA molecule are discarded and other parts are modified (RNA processing).
Because of these complexities, the genetic material of a eucaryotic cell offers many more opportunities for control than are present in bacteria.
Present-day living cells are classified as procaryotic (bacteria and their close relatives) or eucaryotic. Although they have a relatively simple structure, procaryotic cells are biochemically versatile and diverse: for example, all of the major metabolic pathways can be found in bacteria, including the three principal energy-yielding processes of glycolysis, respiration, and photosynthesis. Eucaryotic cells are larger and more complex than procaryotic cells and contain more DNA, together with components that allow this DNA to be handled in elaborate ways. The DNA of the eucaryotic cell is enclosed in a membrane-bounded nucleus, while the cytoplasm contains many other membrane-bounded organelles, including mitochondria, which carry out the oxidation of food molecules, and, in plant cells, chloroplasts, which carry out photosynthesis. Mitochondria and chloroplasts are almost certainly the descendants of earlier procaryotic cells that established themselves as internal symbionts of a larger anaerobic cell. Eucaryotic cells are also unique in containing a cytoskeleton of protein filaments that helps organize the cytoplasm and provides the machinery for movement.
Single-cell organisms, such as bacteria and protozoa, have been so successful in adapting to a variety of different environments that they comprise more than half of the total biomass on earth. Unlike animals, many of these unicellular organisms can synthesize all of the substances they need from a few simple nutrients, and some of them divide more than once every hour. What, then, was the selective advantage that led to the evolution of multicellular organisms?
A short answer is that by collaboration and by division of labor it becomes possible to exploit resources that no single cell could utilize so well. This principle, applying at first to simple associations of cells, has been taken to an extreme in the multicellular organisms we see today. Multicellularity enables a plant, for example, to become physically large; to have roots in the ground, where one set of cells can take up water and nutrients; and to have leaves in the air, where another set of cells can efficiently capture radiant energy from the sun. Specialized cells in the stem of the plant form channels for transporting water and nutrients between the roots and the leaves. Yet another set of specialized cells forms a layer of epidermis to prevent water loss and to provide a protected internal environment (see Panel 1-2, pp. 28-29). The plant as a whole does not compete directly with unicellular organisms for its ecological niche; it has found a radically different way to survive and propagate.
As different animals and plants appeared, they changed the environment in which further evolution occurred. Survival in a jungle calls for different talents than survival in the open sea. Innovations in movement, sensory detection, communication, social organization - all enabled eucaryotic organisms to compete, propagate, and survive in ever more complex ways.
Each fruiting body, packed with spores, is created by the aggregation and differentiation of about a million myxobacteria. (From P.L. Grilione and J. Pangborn, J. Bacteriol. 124:1558-1565, 1975.)
(Courtesy of David Kirk.)
In some ways Volvox is more like a multicellular organism than a simple colony. All of its flagella beat in synchrony as it spins through the water, and the colony is structurally and functionally polarized and can swim toward a distant source of light. The reproductive cells are usually confined to one end of the colony, where they divide to form new miniature colonies, which are initially sheltered inside the parent sphere. Thus, in a primitive way, Volvox displays the two essential features of all multicellular organisms: its cells become specialized, and they cooperate. By specialization and cooperation the cells combine to form a coordinated single organism with more capabilities than any of its component parts.
Organized patterns of cell differentiation occur even in some procaryotes. For example, many kinds of cyanobacteria remain together after cell division, forming filamentous chains that can be as much as a meter in length. At regular intervals along the filament, individual cells take on a distinctive character and become able to incorporate atmospheric nitrogen into organic molecules. These few specialized cells perform nitrogen fixation for their neighbors and share the products with them. But eucaryotic cells appear to be very much better at this sort of organized division of labor; they, and not procaryotes, are the living units from which all the more complex multicellular organisms are constructed.
To form a multicellular organism, the cells must be somehow bound together, and eucaryotes have evolved a number of different ways to satisfy this need. In Volvox, as noted above, the cells do not separate entirely at cell division but remain connected by cytoplasmic bridges. In higher plants the cells not only remain connected by cytoplasmic bridges (called plasmodesmata), they also are imprisoned in a rigid honeycomb of chambers walled with cellulose that the cells themselves have secreted (cell walls).
The cells of most animals do not have rigid walls, and cytoplasmic bridges are unusual. Instead, the cells are bound together by a relatively loose meshwork of large extracellular organic molecules (called the extracellular matrix) and by adhesions between their plasma membranes. Very often, side-to-side attachments between the cells hold them together to form a multicellular sheet, or epithelium.
Of all the ways in which animal cells are woven together into multicellular tissues, the epithelial arrangement is perhaps the most fundamentally important. The epithelial sheet has much the same significance for the evolution of complex multicellular organisms that the cell membrane has for the evolution of complex single cells.
(A) Hydra oligactis in its natural environment; in this species of Hydra, the tentacles hang down to catch prey. The projections budding from the side of the body are progeny that will eventually detach from their parent. (B) Diagram of the cellular architecture of the body of a typical Hydra. The outer layer of cells (ectoderm) has protective, predatory, and sensory functions, while cells of the inner layer (endoderm) function principally in digestion. Both epithelial sheets also have a contractile or muscular function, enabling the animal to move. The movements are coordinated by nerve cells that occupy a deep, protected position within each epithelium, forming an interconnected network. (A, courtesy of Richard Manuel.)
Feeding is one of a range of fairly complex activities this animal can perform. A single Hydra is photographed catching small water fleas in its tentacles; in the last panel it is stuffing these prey into its coelenteron for digestion. (Courtesy of Amata Hornbruch.)
A Hydra can swim, glide on its base, or, as shown here, travel by somersaulting.
The cells of Hydra are not only bound together mechanically and connected by junctions that seal off the interior from the exterior environment, they also communicate with one another along the length of the body. If one end of a Hydra is cut off, the remaining cells react to the absence of the amputated part by adjusting their characters and rearranging themselves so as to regenerate a complete animal. Evidently, signals pass from one part of the organism to the other, governing the development of its body pattern - with tentacles and a mouth at one end and a foot at the other. Moreover, these signals are independent of the nervous system. If a developing Hydra is treated with a drug that prevents nerve cells from forming, the animal is unable to move about, catch prey, or feed itself. Its digestive system still functions normally, however, so that it can be kept alive by anyone with the patience to stuff its normal prey into its mouth. In such force-fed animals the body pattern is maintained, and lost parts are regenerated just as well as in an animal that has an intact nervous system.
The vastly more complex higher animals have evolved from simpler ancestors resembling coelenterates, and these higher animals owe their complexity to more sophisticated exploitation of the same basic principles of cell cooperation that underlie the construction of Hydra. Epithelial sheets of cells line all external and internal surfaces in the body, creating sheltered compartments and controlled internal environments in which specialized functions are performed by differentiated cells. Specialized cells interact and communicate with one another, setting up signals to govern the character of each cell according to its place in the structure as a whole. To show how it is possible to generate multicellular organisms of such size, precision, and complexity as a tree, a fly, or a mammal, however, it is necessary to consider more closely the sequence of events in development.
The cells of almost every multicellular organism are generated by repeated division from a single precursor cell; they constitute a clone. As proliferation continues and the clone grows, some of the cells, as we have seen, become differentiated from others, adopting a different structure, a different chemistry, and a different function, usually in response to cues from their neighbors. It is remarkable that eucaryotic cells and their progeny will usually persist in their differently specialized states even after the influences that originally directed their differentiation have disappeared - in other words, these cells have a memory. Consequently, their final character is not determined simply by their final environment, but rather by the entire sequence of influences to which the cells have been exposed in the course of development. Thus as the body grows and matures, progressively finer details of the adult body pattern become specified, creating an organism of gradually increasing complexity whose ultimate form is the expression of a long developmental history.
The final structure of an animal or plant reflects its evolutionary history, which, like development, presents a chronicle of progress from the simple to the complex. What then is the connection between the two perspectives, of evolution on the one hand and development on the other?
The early stages (above) are very similar; the later stages (below) are more divergent. The earliest stages are drawn roughly to scale; the later stages are not. (From E. Haeckel, Anthropogenie, oder Entwickel-ungsgeschichte des Menschen. Leipzig: Engelmann, 1874. Courtesy of the Bodleian Library, Oxford.)
Such observations are not difficult to understand. Consider the process by which a new anatomical feature - say, an elongated beak - appears in the course of evolution. A random mutation occurs that changes the amino acid sequence of a protein or the timing of its synthesis and hence its biological activity. This alteration may, by chance, affect the cells responsible for the formation of the beak in such a way that they make one that is longer. But the mutation must also be compatible with the development of the rest of the organism; only then will it be propagated by natural selection. There would be little selective advantage in forming a longer beak if, in the process, the tongue was lost or the ears failed to develop. A catastrophe of this type is more likely if the mutation affects events occurring early in development than if it affects those near the end. The early cells of an embryo are like cards at the bottom of a house of cards - a great deal depends on them, and even small changes in their properties are likely to result in disaster. Fundamental steps appear to have been "frozen" into developmental processes, just as the genetic code or protein synthesis mechanisms have become frozen into the basic biochemical organization of the cell. In contrast, cells produced near the end of development (or produced early but forming accessory structures such as the placenta that are not incorporated in the adult body) have more freedom to change. It is presumably for this reason that the embryos of different species so often resemble each other in their early stages and, as they develop, seem sometimes to replay the steps of evolution.
Schematic diagram.
1. The muscle cell has made contraction its specialty. Its cytoplasm is packed with organized arrays of protein filaments, including vast numbers of actin filaments. There are also many mitochondria interspersed among the protein filaments, supplying ATP as fuel for the contractile apparatus.
2. The nerve cell stimulates the muscle to contract, conveying an excitatory signal to the muscle from the brain or spinal cord. The nerve cell is therefore extraordinarily elongated: its main body, containing the nucleus, may lie a meter or more from the junction with the muscle. The cytoskeleton is consequently well developed so as to maintain the unusual shape of the cell and to transport materials efficiently from one end of the cell to the other. The most crucial specialization of the nerve cell, however, is its plasma membrane, which contains proteins that act as ion pumps and ion channels, causing a movement of ions that is equivalent to a flow of electricity. Whereas all cells contain such pumps and channels in their plasma membranes, the nerve cell has exploited them in such a way that a pulse of electricity can propagate in a fraction of a second from one end of the cell to the other, conveying a signal for action.
3. Lastly, Schwann cells are specialists in the mass production of plasma membrane, which they wrap around the elongated portion of the nerve cell, laying down layer upon layer of membrane like a roll of tape, to form a myelin sheath that serves as insulation.
The various specialized cell types in a single higher plant or animal appear as different from one another as any cells could be. This seems paradoxical, since all of the cells in a multicellular organism are closely related, having recently descended from the same precursor cell - the fertilized egg. Common lineage implies similar genes; how then do the differences arise? In a few cases cell specialization involves the loss of genetic material. An extreme example is the mammalian red blood cell, which loses its entire nucleus in the course of differentiation. But the overwhelming majority of cells in most plant and animal species retain all of the genetic information contained in the fertilized egg. Specialization depends on changes in gene expression, not on the loss or acquisition of genes.
Even bacteria do not make all of their types of protein all of the time but are able to adjust the level of synthesis according to external conditions. Proteins required specifically for the metabolism of lactose, for example, are made by many bacteria only when this sugar is available for use; and when conditions are unfavorable for cell proliferation, some bacteria arrest most of their normal metabolic processes and form spores, which have tough, impermeable outer walls and a cytoplasm of altered composition.
Eucaryotic cells have evolved far more sophisticated mechanisms for controlling gene expression, and these affect entire systems of interacting gene products. Groups of genes are activated or repressed in response to both external and internal signals. Membrane composition, cytoskeleton, secretory products, even metabolism - all these and other features must change in a coordinated manner when cells become differentiated. The radical differences of character between cell types reflect stable changes in gene expression. The controls that bring about these changes have evolved in eucaryotes to a degree unmatched in procaryotes, defining the complex rules of cell behavior that can generate an organized multicellular organism from a single egg.
To outward appearances, evolution has transformed the universe of living things to such a degree that they are no longer recognizable as relatives. A human being, a fly, a daisy, a yeast, a bacterium - they seem so different that it scarcely makes sense to compare them. Yet all are descendants of one ancestor, and as we probe their inner workings more and more deeply, we find more and more evidence of their common origins. We now know that the basic molecular machinery of life has been conserved to an extent that would surely have astonished the originators of the theory of evolution. As we have seen, all life forms have essentially the same chemistry, based on amino acids, sugars, fatty acids, and nucleotides; all synthesize these chemical constituents in an essentially similar way; all store their genetic information in DNA and express it through RNA and protein. But the degree of evolutionary conservatism becomes even more striking when we examine the detailed sequences of nucleotides in specific genes and of amino acids in specific proteins. The chances are that the bacterial enzyme catalyzing any particular common reaction, such as the splitting of a six-carbon sugar into two three-carbon sugars in glycolysis, will have an amino acid sequence (and a three-dimensional structure) unmistakably similar to the enzyme catalyzing the same reaction in human beings. The two enzymes - and, equivalently, the genes that specify them - not only have a similar function, but also almost certainly a common evolutionary origin. One can exploit these relationships to trace ancient evolutionary pathways; and by comparing gene sequences and recognizing homologies, one discovers hidden parallels and similarities between different organisms.
Family resemblances are also often found among genes coding for proteins that carry out related functions within a single organism. These genes are also evolutionarily related, and their existence reveals a basic strategy by which increasingly complex organisms have arisen: genes and portions of genes become duplicated, and the new copies then diverge from the old by mutation and recombination to serve new, additional purposes. In this way, starting from a relatively small set of genes in primitive cells, the more complex life forms have been able to evolve the more than 50,000 genes thought to be present in a higher animal or plant. From an understanding of one gene or protein, we consequently gain insight into a whole family of others homologous to it. Thus molecular biology both underscores the unity of the living world and gives us tools to discover the general mechanisms that underlie its endless variety of inventions.
In the next chapter we begin our account of these mechanisms with a discussion of the most basic components of the biological construction kit - the small molecules from which all larger components of living cells are made.
The branches of the evolutionary tree show paths of descent but do not indicate by their length the passage of time. (Note, similarly, that the vertical axis of the diagram shows major categories of organisms and not time.)
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