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part of its genome and independent existence, to
become a cellular organelle. There are likely to have
been repeated instances of endosymbiosis, leading
to the major organelles that are found in present-day
eukaryotes, and resulting in the rapid expansion of
unicellular eukaryotes which began about 2 billion
years ago. The evidence for this is still retained in
eukaryotic cells today. For example:


  • Organelles such as mitochondria and chloroplasts
    are surrounded by double membranes, the outer
    membrane almost certainly being an enclosing
    membrane to “contain” the engulfed cell (as happens
    in more recent endosymbioses such as Rhizobiumcells
    in the root nodules of legumes).

  • Mitochondria and chloroplasts of present-day eukary-
    otescontain a residual genome. It is not sufficient
    for an independent existence, but codes for elements
    of the electron-transport chain in mitochondria and
    some of the photosynthetic functions of chloroplasts.


150 CHAPTER 8

rumen archaea, which generate methane, according to
the equation:

4H 2 +HCO 3 −+H+→CH 4 + 3H 2 O

This methane is repeatedly belched from the animal’s
gut. Although we have accounted for all the main prod-
ucts of the mixed acid fermentation, it should be recog-
nized that the balance of these products is variable and
depends on the types of organism present and other
conditions in the rumen.


Comparison of hydrogenosomes and
mitochondria

It is now almost universally accepted that eukaryotic
(nucleate) cells originated from prokaryotic cells by the
process of endosymbiosis– when one cell engulfed
another, and the engulfed cell progressively lost all or

Fig. 8.8Diagram of the mixed-acid fermentation of the rumen chytrid Neocallimastix. The end-products of this fermenta-
tion are shown in the small shaded boxes. Part of the fermentation occurs in the cytosol, part in the hydrogenosome.
Some of the details are known (Orpin 1993; Marvin-Sikkema et al. 1994); others details are assumed, based on know-
ledge of the mixed-acid fermentation of some enteric bacteria. (After Trinci et al. 1994.)

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