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SCIENCE
INDEX
2000
2001
2002
Biology
New cellular evolution
theory rejects single cell beginning
Jim
Barlow, Life Sciences Editor
(217) 333-5802; b-james3@uiuc.edu
6/17/02
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Photo
by Bill Wiegand
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Illinois
microbiologist Carl W oese presents his theory of cellular
evolution, which challenges long-held traditions and beliefs
of biologists, in the June 18 issue of the Proceedings of
the National Academy of Sciences.
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CHAMPAIGN, Ill.
Life did not
begin with one primordial cell. Instead, there were initially at least
three simple types of loosely constructed cellular organizations. They
swam in a pool of genes, evolving in a communal way that aided one another
in bootstrapping into the three distinct types of cells by sharing their
evolutionary inventions.
The driving force in evolving cellular life on Earth, says Carl Woese,
a microbiologist at the University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign,
has been horizontal gene transfer, in which the acquisition of alien
cellular components, including genes and proteins, work to promote the
evolution of recipient cellular entities.
Woese presents his theory of cellular evolution, which challenges long-held
traditions and beliefs of biologists, in the June 18 issue of the Proceedings
of the National Academy of Sciences.
Cellular evolution, he argues, began in a communal environment in which
the loosely organized cells took shape through extensive horizontal
gene transfer. Such a transfer previously had been recognized as having
a minor role in evolution, but the arrival of microbial genomics, Woese
says, is shedding a more accurate light. Horizontal gene transfer, he
argues, has the capacity to rework entire genomes. With simple primitive
entities this process can "completely erase an organismal genealogical
trace."
His theory challenges the longstanding Darwinian assumption known as
the Doctrine of Common Descent that all life on Earth has descended
from one original primordial form.
"We cannot expect to explain cellular evolution if we stay locked
in the classical Darwinian mode of thinking," Woese said. "The
time has come for biology to go beyond the Doctrine of Common Descent."
"Neither it nor any variation of it can capture the tenor, the
dynamic, the essence of the evolutionary process that spawned cellular
organization," Woese wrote in his paper.
Going against traditional thinking is not new to Woese, a recipient
of the National Medal of Science (2000), and holder of the Stanley O.
Ikenberry Endowed Chair at Illinois.
In the late 1970s Woese identified the Archaea, a group of microorganisms
that thrive primarily in extremely harsh environments, as a separate
life form from the planets two long-accepted lines the
typical bacteria and the eukaryotes (creatures like animals, plants,
fungi and certain unicellular organisms, whose cells have a visible
nucleus). His discovery eventually led to a revision of biology books
around the world.
The three primary divisions of life now comprise the familiar bacteria
and eukaryotes, along with the Archaea. Woese argues that these three
life forms evolved separately but exchanged genes, which he refers to
as inventions, along the way. He rejects the widely held notion that
endosymbiosis (which led to chloroplasts and mitochondria) was the driving
force in the evolution of the eukaryotic cell itself or that it was
a determining factor in cellular evolution, because that approach assumes
a beginning with fully evolved cells.
His theory follows years of analysis of the Archaea and a comparison
with bacterial and eukaryote cell lines.
"The individual cell designs that evolved in this way are nevertheless
fundamentally distinct, because the initial conditions in each case
are somewhat different," Woese wrote in his introduction. "As
a cell design becomes more complex and interconnected a critical point
is reached where a more integrated cellular organization emerges, and
vertically generated novelty can and does assume greater importance."
Woese calls this critical point in a cells evolutionary course
the Darwinian Threshold, a time when a genealogical trail, or the origin
of a species, begins. From this point forward, only relatively minor
changes can occur in the evolution of the organization of a given type
of cell.
To understand cellular evolution, one must go back beyond the Darwinian
Threshold, Woese said.
His argument is built around evidence "from the three main cellular
information processing systems" translation, transcription
and replication and he suggests that cellular evolution progressed
in that order, with translation leading the way.
The pivotal development in the evolution of modern protein-based cells,
Woese said, was the invention of symbolic representation on the molecular
level that is, the capacity to "translate" nucleic
acid sequence into amino acid sequence.
Human language is another example of the evolutionary potential of symbolic
representation, he argues. "It has set Homo sapiens entirely apart
from its (otherwise very close) primitive relatives, and it is bringing
forth a new level of biological organization," Woese wrote.
The advent of translation, he said, caused various archaic nucleic-based
entities to begin changing into proteinaceous ones, emerging as forerunners
of modern cells as genes and other individual components were exchanged
among them. The three modern types of cellular organization represent
a mosaic of relationships: In some ways one pair of them will appear
highly similar; in others a different pair will.
This, Woese said, is exactly what would be expected had they individually
begun as distinct entities, but during their subsequent evolutions they
had engaged in genetic cross-talk they had indulged in a commerce
of genes.
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