Endosymbiosis is where one organism lives within another
If the relationship is?beneficial?to both organisms the engulfed organism is not digested
For endosymbiosis to occur one organism must have?engulfed?the other by the process of?endocytosis
Endosymbiotic theory
The?endosymbiotic theory?is used to explain the?origin?of?eukaryotic cells. The evidence provided for this theory comes from the structure of the?mitochondria?and?chloroplasts
Scientists have suggested that ancestral prokaryote cells evolved into ancestral heterotrophic and autotrophic cells through the following steps:
Heterotrophic?cells:
To overcome a small SA:V ratio ancestral prokaryote cells developed folds in their membrane. From these infoldings organelles such as the nucleus and rough endoplasmic reticulum formed
This gave the larger prokaryote a?competitive advantage?as it had a ready supply of?ATP?and gradually the cell evolved into the?heterotrophic eukaryotes?with?mitochondria?that are present today
At some stage in their evolution, the heterotrophic eukaryotic cell engulfed a?smaller photosynthetic?prokaryote. This cell provided a competitive advantage as it supplied the heterotropic cell with an?alternative source of energy,?carbohydrates
Over time the photosynthetic prokaryote evolved into?chloroplasts?and the heterotrophic cells into?autotrophic eukaryotic?cellsAutotrophic cells:
The endosymbiotic theory - an explanation for the evolution of eukaryotic cells
Evidence to support the endosymbiotic theory
Both reproduce by?binary fission
Both contain their?own circular, non-membrane bound DNA
They both?transcribe mRNA?from their DNA
They both have?70S ribosomes?to synthesise their own proteins
They both have?double membranesThe evidence to support the endosymbiotic theory arises from the features that the?mitochondria?and?chloroplasts?have in common with?prokaryotes:
Exam Tip
Learn how the structure of the mitochondria and chloroplast support the endosymbiotic theory.