Thursday, May 3, 2012
New Primordial Protozoan Species Is Not in Any Known Kingdom of Life
A tiny microorganism found in Norwegian lake sludge may be related to
the very oldest life forms on this planet, a possible modern cousin of
our earliest common ancestor. It is not a fungus, alga, parasite, plant
or animal, yet it has features associated with other kingdoms of life.
It could be a founding member of the newest kingdom on the tree of life ,
scientists said. Life on Earth is divided into two main groups, the
prokaryotes and the eukaryotes. Prokaryotes are simple life forms, with
no membranes or cell nuclei; this group includes bacteria and archaea.
Eukaryotes, which include humans, animals, plants, fungi and algae, have
cell membranes and nuclei. This new organism is a eukaryote. More
specifically, it’s an algae-eating protozoan, a type of creature that
have been known to science since the Civil War but which have lacked
genetic studies because they’re difficult to culture. Researchers in
Norway were able to harvest them from a lake bed and breed them in the
lab. This one is called Collodictyon.Researchers led by Kamran
Shalchian-Tabrizi, head of the Microbial Evolution Research Group (MERG)
at the University of Oslo, were examining the species’ genes and
morphological makeup and found it is not like anything else. It evolved a
billion years ago, give or take a couple hundred million years. It
could have been living the same way since then, providing scientists a
glimpse of what the earliest life forms looked like. The organism is
weird in several key ways. It has four flagella, for instance, which
makes it different from bacteria and eukaryotes. Mammals, fungi and
amoebae only have one flagellum — that’s the propeller-like feature that
helps cells move (think of the “tail” of a sperm cell). Algae, plants
and single-celled parasites called excavates are thought to have had two
flagella. Collodictyon is somewhere between an excavate and an
amoeba. Also, the organism has the same internal structure as a
parasite, but it uses amoeba-like protuberances to catch its food, which
are blue-green algae. So again, it combines features from two branches
of the eukaryotes, further evidence that it’s a primordial creature, the
researchers say. Even at its highest levels, the tree of life is
mutable — the domain archaea was only recognized in 1990. So it wouldn’t
be out of the question for this organism to spark an entirely new
kingdom.
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