Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 Learning from life on Earth in the present day
- 2 Essentials of fungal cell biology
- 3 First, make a habitat
- 4 The building blocks of life
- 5 An extraterrestrial origin of life?
- 6 Endogenous synthesis of prebiotic organic compounds on the young Earth
- 7 Cooking the recipe for life
- 8 ‘It’s life, Jim . . .’
- 9 Coming alive: what happened and where?
- 10 My name is LUCA
- 11 Towards eukaryotes
- 12 Rise of the fungi
- 13 Emergence of diversity
- References
- Index
10 - My name is LUCA
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2013
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- 1 Learning from life on Earth in the present day
- 2 Essentials of fungal cell biology
- 3 First, make a habitat
- 4 The building blocks of life
- 5 An extraterrestrial origin of life?
- 6 Endogenous synthesis of prebiotic organic compounds on the young Earth
- 7 Cooking the recipe for life
- 8 ‘It’s life, Jim . . .’
- 9 Coming alive: what happened and where?
- 10 My name is LUCA
- 11 Towards eukaryotes
- 12 Rise of the fungi
- 13 Emergence of diversity
- References
- Index
Summary
‘The most striking feature of life is its similarity!’ (Fenchel, 2002, chapter 12, p. 123). Cavalier-Smith (2010a) called it stasis and illustrated it this way:
Explaining stasis is as important as explaining change . . . Inheritance alone is too imperfect to achieve this. About half the nucleotides in ribosomal RNA (rRNA) molecules have an identical sequence in every bacterium, animal, plant and fungus, despite every nucleotide regularly mutating, some in every generation in every species. Since you started reading this paper, at least one cell of your body will have one or more new mutations in regions of rDNA where the ancestral sequence in the last common ancestor of all life has never actually been supplanted by evolution over 3.5 billion years. The same applies to hundreds of other genes essential for life. Stasis stems from the lethality (or dramatically lower fertility) of such variants (purifying selection) and is not inherent to the genetic material. Without death, life could not persist. Contrary to what Darwin thought, and many creationists still do, the problem is less to explain how genetic variation occurs, than to understand why some organismal properties never change while others frequently do. Differential reproductive success (anthropomorphically ‘natural selection’) biases genotypes of successive generations subjected to a perpetual, physically inevitable, barrage of mutations in every part of the genome. This beautifully explains both long-term stasis and radical organismal transformation. Both stasis and change are needed to explain the patterns of similarity and difference that enable hierarchical Linnean classification.
(Cavalier-Smith, 2010a, p. 113)The principle I have used in this book so far is the general consideration that features that are common to all organisms that exist today are the fundamental cell functions that today’s organisms have inherited from their Last Universal Common Ancestor (LUCA).
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Fungal Biology in the Origin and Emergence of Life , pp. 123 - 141Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2013