How Single-Cell Organisms Evolve into Multicellular Ones
Show Me The Science Month Day 18 The transition from one-celled microbes to multicellularity was a huge step in the evolution of life on this planet, but as daunting as this evolutionary step seems, it didn't happen just once. Today's plants, fungi, animals, and various types of algae are all descendants of separate transitions to multicellular life. All of these transitions from a single-cell lifestyle to multicellularity occurred in the very distant past, so how can we learn anything about them? It turns out that it is not hard to find living, modern examples that closely parallel the momentous evolutionary transitions that led to animals, plants, and fungi. Right now on earth there are primitive multicellular organisms that, in many ways, resemble the first multicellular creatures that existed a billion years ago. Researchers are using these organisms to understand what kinds of genetic changes are needed to turn a single-celled organism into a multicellular one. read more
Read the whole article on Scientific Blogging
More from Scientific Blogging
Related
- How Volvox got its grooveThu, 19 Feb 2009, 14:30:29 EST
- Dictyostelium cells shown to lay 'breadcrumb trail' as first step in multicellular formationMon, 1 Dec 2008, 11:43:29 EST
- Surprising discovery: Multicellular response is 'all for one'Thu, 8 May 2008, 14:42:51 EDT
- Can you hear me now?Mon, 7 Jul 2008, 17:36:08 EDT
- Trichoplax genome sequenced -- 'rosetta stone' for understanding evolutionWed, 3 Sep 2008, 16:56:47 EDT