NASA RESEARCH REVEALS MAJOR
INSIGHT INTO EVOLUTION OF LIFE ON EARTH
From NASA
August 19, 2009
MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. --
Humans might not be walking on Earth today if not for the ancient fusing of two
microscopic, single-celled organisms called prokaryotes, NASA-funded research
has found.
By comparing proteins
present in more than 3000 different prokaryotes
- a type of single-celled
organism without a nucleus - molecular biologist James A. Lake from the
University of California at Los Angeles' Center for Astrobiology showed that
two major classes of relatively simple microbes fused together more than 2.5
billion years ago. Lake 's research reveals a
new pathway for the evolution of life on Earth. These insights are published in
the Aug. 20 online edition of the journal Nature.
This endosymbiosis, or
merging of two cells, enabled the evolution of a highly stable and successful
organism with the capacity to use energy from sunlight via photosynthesis.
Further evolution led to photosynthetic organisms producing oxygen as a
byproduct. The resulting oxygenation of Earth's atmosphere profoundly affected
the evolution of life, leading to more complex organisms that consumed oxygen,
which were the ancestors of modern oxygen-breathing creatures including humans.
"Higher life would not have happened without this event," Lake said. "These are very important organisms. At
the time these two early prokaryotes were evolving, there was no oxygen in the
Earth's atmosphere. Humans could not live. No oxygen-breathing organisms could
live."
The genetic machinery and
structural organization of these two organisms merged to produce a new class of
prokaryotes, called double membrane prokaryotes. As they evolved, members of
this double membrane class, called cyanobacteria, became the primary
oxygen-producers on the planet, generating enough oxygen to alter the chemical
composition of the atmosphere and set the stage for the evolution of more
complex organisms such as animals and plants. "This work is a major
advance in our understanding of how a group of organisms came to be that
learned to harness the sun and then effected the greatest environmental change
Earth has ever seen, in this case with beneficial results," said Carl
Pilcher, director of the NASA Astrobiology Institute at NASA's Ames Research
Center in Moffett Field, Calif., which co-funded the study with the National
Science Foundation in Arlington, Va.
Founded in 1998, the NASA
Astrobiology Institute is a partnership between NASA, 14 U.S. teams and
six international consortia. The institute's goals are to promote, conduct, and
lead interdisciplinary astrobiology research; train a new generation of
astrobiology researchers; and share the excitement of astrobiology with
learners of all ages.
2 comments:
Better not let the Creationists hear about this one, their heads might explode.
Spread the news I say.... [grin]
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