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  2. Symbiogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Symbiogenesis

    These theories did not gain traction until more detailed electron-microscopic comparisons between cyanobacteria and chloroplasts were made, such as by Hans Ris in 1961 and 1962. [16] [17] These, combined with the discovery that plastids and mitochondria contain their own DNA, [18] led to a resurrection of the idea of symbiogenesis in the 1960s.

  3. Endosymbiont - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endosymbiont

    The most common examples of obligate endosymbiosis are mitochondria and chloroplasts; however, they do not reproduce via mitosis in tandem with their host cells. Instead, they replicate via binary fission, a replication process uncoupled from the host cells in which they reside.

  4. Eukaryogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Eukaryogenesis

    Eugene Koonin and others, noting that the archaea share many features with eukaryotes, argue that rudimentary eukaryotic traits such as membrane-lined compartments were acquired before endosymbiosis added mitochondria to the early eukaryotic cell, while the cell wall was lost. In the same way, mitochondrial acquisition must not be regarded as ...

  5. Lynn Margulis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lynn_Margulis

    The endosymbiosis theory of organogenesis became widely accepted in the early 1980s, after the genetic material of mitochondria and chloroplasts had been found to be significantly different from that of the symbiont's nuclear DNA. [24] In 1995, English evolutionary biologist Richard Dawkins had this to say about Lynn Margulis and her work:

  6. Proto-mitochondrion - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Proto-mitochondrion

    Geiger et alii (2023) propose placing the recently-discovered (2016) genus Iodidimonas, found in a sister clade to Rickettsidae, the Caulobacteridae, [5] as the closest free-living relative of mitochondria, as it possesses more metabolic products matching that of mitochondria today, such as cardiolipins and sphingolipids, and important genetic ...

  7. Hydrogen hypothesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hydrogen_hypothesis

    The hydrogen hypothesis is a model proposed by William F. Martin and Miklós Müller in 1998 that describes a possible way in which the mitochondrion arose as an endosymbiont within a prokaryotic host in the archaea, giving rise to a symbiotic association of two cells from which the first eukaryotic cell could have arisen (symbiogenesis).

  8. Viral eukaryogenesis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Viral_eukaryogenesis

    The viral eukaryogenesis hypothesis posits that eukaryotes are composed of three ancestral elements: a viral component that became the modern nucleus; a prokaryotic cell (an archaeon according to the eocyte hypothesis) which donated the cytoplasm and cell membrane of modern cells; and another prokaryotic cell (here bacterium) that, by endocytosis, became the modern mitochondrion or chloroplast.

  9. Plastid evolution - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plastid_evolution

    Secondary endosymbiosis results in the engulfment of an organism that has already performed primary endosymbiosis. Thus, four plasma membranes are formed. The first originating from the cyanobacteria, the second from the eukaryote that engulfed the cyanobacteria, and the third from the eukaryote who engulfed the primary endosymbiotic eukaryote. [11]