Protists 1 Flashcards
what does the protist fossil record show
Oldest fossil protist 1.2 bya, red alga
Protists display numerous evolutionary adaptations resulting in widely different organisms
There are also recent radiations (aka bursts of new species and groups)
what are the four stages of eukaryote evolution from prokaryotes
Four stages:
- loss of prokaryote cell walls and replaced with new types of cell wall
- Elaboration of internal membrane systems e.g nuclear envelope
- Development of intracellular trafficking system for molecules
- endosymbiosis leading to phtosynthetic cyanobacteria becoming chloroplast and alpha-protobacteria becoming mitochondria
what is endosymbiosis
Endosymbiosis:
evidence: chloroplast and mitochondria share features with prokaryotes
- circular DNA not in a nucleus
- some very similar enzymes
- similar ribosomes
Chloroplasts have been derived just once
the engulfment of a prokaryote = primary endosymbiosis
some marine protists acquired photosynthesis from absorbing a eukaryotic cell
either red algal or green algal cell, both of which have their own nucleus
how do protists get their nutrition
- Autotrophs
- like algae consume light
- Heterotrophs
- ingestive heterotrophs consume particles and cells
- Absorptive heterotrophs absorb molecules
what is basic protist phylogeny
I. Supergroup Excavata
- Diplomonads
II. Supergroup SAR
- Stramenopiles
i.Diatoms
ii. Brown algae
iii. Oomycetes
- Alveolates
i.Dinoflagellates
ii.Apicomplexans
III. Supergroup Unikonta
- Amoebozoans
IV. Supergroup Archaeplastida
- Rhodophyta
- Chlorophyta
what are some ways protists drive selection
Heterotrophic protists eat other organisms like other protists. They can also be parasites weakening another species’ fitness
They are massive drivers of selection, responsible for killing off species
describe supergroup Excavate
Supergroup Excavata
- Asymmetric in shape, have a feeding furrow on one sideDiplomonds:
- lack chloroplasts and a cell walls
- don’t use ATP or mitochondria
- have mitosomes and hydrogenosomes that are smaller
- anaerobic use iron-sulphur chemistry
- Ex Giardia:
- infects hikers who drink in mountain streams
how is the SAR clade grouped
Supergroup SAR Clade (Stramenopiles, Alveolates, and Rhizarians)
- united on the basis of whole-genome sequencing. very diverse, very controversial
what are Diatoms like
- Diatoms
- have glass cell walls made of amorphous silica dioxide
- Glass is made of thermodynamically unstable stuff. Sorta solid, sorta liquid.
- silica dioxide shells take less energy to produce, so diatoms have more energy for growth making them the fastest growing protists
- 2-500 um in size
- the binary fission that diatoms undergo leaves one daughter cell smaller than the parent due to the way their cell walls work. To overcome the progressive restriction this causes the zygote enters another form called an auxospore which is large and has silica bands instead of a full cell
- so sex resets the size
What are brown algae like
- Brown Algae
- largest seaweeds
- multicellular
- BC is a kelp hotspot with over 30 species
- bullwhip kelp aka mermaid’s bladder, ribbon kelp, bladder wrack, or Ihqyaama
what is primary endosymbiosis
Far in the past one cell (probably a bacteria) entered into the cell of another organism (probably an Archean)
The bacteria was an aerobic organism who uses oxygen to make energy. The exterior organism didn’t digest the smaller one and found its energy production useful.
The smaller organism over time became the mitochondria in Eukaryotes.
A similar process occurred with an organism like a cyanobacterium becoming a chloroplast.
what does Endosymbiosis show, and what are some results
Endosymbiosis shows that when opportunity presents itself in nature then a series of random events usually leads to an organism or population using it.
Mitochondria and chloroplast have two membranes
Endosymbiosis led to changes in the atmosphere and allowed Eukaryotes to grow bigger cells and eventually became multicellular
Mitochondrial DNA is inherited from the mother.
what is secondary endosymbiosis
- sometimes an organism that arose from endosymbiosis can be absorbed by another cell
- ex Red alga was absorbed to make dinoflagellates, Apicomplexcans, and Stramenopiles
- and green alga was absorbed 2 different times to make the line of Euglenids and the line of Chlorarachniophytes
what is the record for number of genomes in one cell
Cryptomonas gyropyronoidosa
- Cell nucleus
- Mitochondria - PE
- Red Alga nucleus - SE
- Chloroplast in the red alga
- Grellia numerosa bacteria
- Megaira polyxenophila bacteria
- Mankyphage virus in the M. polyxenophila
what are hotspots
- places where a great deal of evolution is occuring
- high # of species
- 44% of plants
- 35% of animal diversity
Ex New Caledonia
- plants - ex 14 species of Aravcarie (conifers)
- Animal - ex Blue Kagou (endemic bird)
Endemic = one found in one place
When a species line the blue kagou goes extinct all its parasite species go extinct
Hotspots cover 3% of earth’s surface but hold 50% of plant species