Chapter 28: Protists (1) Flashcards
Explain the structural diversity of protists.
- Protists are unicellular, although there
are some colonial and multicellular species. - The organelles that protists use are the nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and lysosomes.
- Contractile vacuoles that pump excess water from the protistan cell
Explain the nutritional diversity of protists.
- Some protists are photoautotrophs and contain chloroplasts.
- Some are heterotrophs, absorbing organic molecules or ingesting larger food particles. - Still other protists, called mixotrophs, combine photosynthesis and heterotrophic nutrition.
Explain the reproduction diversity in protists
- Some protists are only known to reproduce asexually; others can also reproduce sexually or at least employ the sexual processes of meiosis and fertilization.
- All three basic types of sexual life cycles are represented among protists, along with some variations that do not quite fit any of these types.
Amitochondriates (lacking conventional mitochondria) are the oldest lineage of
eukaryotes. True or false?
It is no longer thought that amitochondriates (lacking conventional mitochondria) are the oldest lineage of eukaryotes
– Many have been shown to have mitochondria and have been reclassified
What are the 5 supergroups of protists?
- Excavata
- SAR
- Archaeplastida
- Unikonta
- Chromaveolata
Considerable evidence indicates that much of protist diversity has its origins in _________.
Considerable evidence indicates that much of protist diversity has its origins in
endosymbiosis.
Endosymbiosis is the process in which a unicellular organism engulfs another cell, which becomes an endosymbiont and then an organelle in the host cell
How did mitochondria and plastid evolve?
– Mitochondria evolved by endosymbiosis of an aerobic prokaryote
– Plastids evolved later by endosymbiosis of a photosynthetic cyanobacterium
The ancestral host of endosymbiosis may have been an _______ or a ________.
The ancestral host may have been an archaean or a “protoeukaryote”
Explain the evolution of mitochondria and plastid.
- Mitochondria arose first through descent from a bacterium that was engulfed by a cell from an archaeal lineage
- The plastid lineage evolved later from a photosynthetic cyanobacterium that was engulfed by a heterotrophic eukaryote
What did the plastid-bearing lineage of protists evolve into?
The plastid-bearing lineage of protists evolved into photosynthetic protists:
– red and green algae
Define primary endosymbiosis and secondary symbiosis.
Primary endosymbiosis because it was the first transfer of photosynthesis from a prokaryote to a eukaryote.
Photosynthesis continued to be passed to diverse groups and across kingdoms in a process called secondary endosymbiosis
Why would it be advantageous to the host to maintain a cyanobacterial endosymbiont?
It would have been advantageous to the host to maintain the cyanobacterial endosymbiont, as a source of sugar from photosynthesis.
How does endosymbiont bacteria become an organelle?
Gene transfer tookplace from endosymbiont to the host nucleus made it dependent on the host
– transferred genes need to be expressed properly
– the translated proteins must be targeted back into the organelle,
where they function
What are the characteristics of excavata?
- The clade Excavata is characterized by its cytoskeleton
- Some members have an “excavated” feeding groove
- This group includes diplomonads, parabasalids, and euglenozoans
What are the characteristics of diplomonads and parabasalids?
Diplomonads and Parabasalids
- These groups
– lack plastids,
– have modified mitochondria
– most live in anaerobic environments
MAP