Sporulation, bacterial cell envelopes and the origin of life.

Nat Rev Microbiol

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, 1200 East California Boulevard, Pasadena, California 91125, USA.

Published: August 2016

Electron cryotomography (ECT) enables the 3D reconstruction of intact cells in a near-native state. Images produced by ECT have led to the proposal that an ancient sporulation-like event gave rise to the second membrane in diderm bacteria. Tomograms of sporulating monoderm and diderm bacterial cells show how sporulation can lead to the generation of diderm cells. Tomograms of Gram-negative and Gram-positive cell walls and purified sacculi suggest that they are more closely related than previously thought and support the hypothesis that they share a common origin. Mapping the distribution of cell envelope architectures onto a recent phylogenetic tree of life indicates that the diderm cell plan, and therefore the sporulation-like event that gave rise to it, must be very ancient. One explanation for this model is that during the cataclysmic transitions of the early Earth, cellular evolution may have gone through a bottleneck in which only spores survived, which implies that the last bacterial common ancestor was a spore.

Download full-text PDF

Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC5327842PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/nrmicro.2016.85DOI Listing

Publication Analysis

Top Keywords

sporulation-like event
8
event rise
8
sporulation bacterial
4
cell
4
bacterial cell
4
cell envelopes
4
envelopes origin
4
origin life
4
life electron
4
electron cryotomography
4

Similar Publications

Sporulation, bacterial cell envelopes and the origin of life.

Nat Rev Microbiol

August 2016

Howard Hughes Medical Institute, Department of Biology and Biological Engineering, California Institute of Technology, 1200 East California Boulevard, Pasadena, California 91125, USA.

Electron cryotomography (ECT) enables the 3D reconstruction of intact cells in a near-native state. Images produced by ECT have led to the proposal that an ancient sporulation-like event gave rise to the second membrane in diderm bacteria. Tomograms of sporulating monoderm and diderm bacterial cells show how sporulation can lead to the generation of diderm cells.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Representatives of the closely related genera, and , are characterized by unicells, dyads or packets in and contrasting uniseriate filaments in . According to the literature, these distinct thallus forms originate by different types of cell division, sporulation (cytogony) versus vegetative cell division (cytotomy), but investigations of their morphology and ultrastructure show a high degree of similarity. Cell walls of both genera are characterized by triangular spaces between cell walls of neighbouring cells and the parental wall or central space among the walls of a cell packet, exfoliations and projections of the parental wall and cap-like and H-like fragments of the cell wall.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Absence of yKu/Hdf1 but not myosin-like proteins alters chromosome dynamics during prophase I in yeast.

Differentiation

January 2008

Max-Planck-Institut für Molekulare Genetik, Ihnestr. 73, D-14195 Berlin, Germany.

Meiosis is central to the formation of haploid gametes or spores in that it segregates homologous chromosomes and halves the chromosome number. A prerequisite of this genome bisection is the pairing of homologous chromosomes during the first meiotic prophase. When budding yeast cells are induced to undergo meiosis, this has profound consequences for nuclear structure: after premeiotic DNA replication centromeres disperse, while telomeres move about the nuclear periphery and temporarily cluster during the leptotene/zygotene transition (bouquet stage) of the prophase to first meiotic division.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Want AI Summaries of new PubMed Abstracts delivered to your In-box?

Enter search terms and have AI summaries delivered each week - change queries or unsubscribe any time!