![Multicellular organism](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly91cGxvYWQud2lraW1lZGlhLm9yZy93aWtpcGVkaWEvY29tbW9ucy90aHVtYi83Lzc3L0NfZWxlZ2Fuc19zdGFpbmVkLmpwZy8xNjAwcHgtQ19lbGVnYW5zX3N0YWluZWQuanBn.jpg )
A multicellular organism is an organism that consists of more than one cell, unlike unicellular organisms. All species of animals, land plants and most fungi are multicellular, as are many algae, whereas a few organisms are partially uni- and partially multicellular, like slime molds and social amoebae such as the genus Dictyostelium.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODNMemMzTDBOZlpXeGxaMkZ1YzE5emRHRnBibVZrTG1wd1p5OHlNakJ3ZUMxRFgyVnNaV2RoYm5OZmMzUmhhVzVsWkM1cWNHYz0uanBn.jpg)
Multicellular organisms arise in various ways, for example by cell division or by aggregation of many single cells.Colonial organisms are the result of many identical individuals joining together to form a colony. However, it can often be hard to separate colonial protists from true multicellular organisms, because the two concepts are not distinct; colonial protists have been dubbed "pluricellular" rather than "multicellular". There are also macroscopic organisms that are multinucleate though technically unicellular, such as the Xenophyophorea that can reach 20 cm.
Evolutionary history
Occurrence
Multicellularity has evolved independently at least 25 times in eukaryotes, and also in some prokaryotes, like cyanobacteria, myxobacteria, actinomycetes, Magnetoglobus multicellularis or Methanosarcina. However, complex multicellular organisms evolved only in six eukaryotic groups: animals, symbiomycotan fungi, brown algae, red algae, green algae, and land plants. It evolved repeatedly for Chloroplastida (green algae and land plants), once for animals, once for brown algae, three times in the fungi (chytrids, ascomycetes, and basidiomycetes) and perhaps several times for slime molds and red algae. The first evidence of multicellular organization, which is when unicellular organisms coordinate behaviors and may be an evolutionary precursor to true multicellularity, is from cyanobacteria-like organisms that lived 3.0–3.5 billion years ago. To reproduce, true multicellular organisms must solve the problem of regenerating a whole organism from germ cells (i.e., sperm and egg cells), an issue that is studied in evolutionary developmental biology. Animals have evolved a considerable diversity of cell types in a multicellular body (100–150 different cell types), compared with 10–20 in plants and fungi.
Loss of multicellularity
Loss of multicellularity occurred in some groups. Fungi are predominantly multicellular, though early diverging lineages are largely unicellular (e.g., Microsporidia) and there have been numerous reversions to unicellularity across fungi (e.g., Saccharomycotina, Cryptococcus, and other yeasts). It may also have occurred in some red algae (e.g., Porphyridium), but they may be primitively unicellular. Loss of multicellularity is also considered probable in some green algae (e.g., Chlorella vulgaris and some Ulvophyceae). In other groups, generally parasites, a reduction of multicellularity occurred, in the number or types of cells (e.g., the myxozoans, multicellular organisms, earlier thought to be unicellular, are probably extremely reduced cnidarians).
Cancer
Multicellular organisms, especially long-living animals, face the challenge of cancer, which occurs when cells fail to regulate their growth within the normal program of development. Changes in tissue morphology can be observed during this process. Cancer in animals (metazoans) has often been described as a loss of multicellularity and an atavistic reversion towards a unicellular-like state. Many genes responsible for the establishment of multicellularity that originated around the appearance of metazoans are deregulated in cancer cells, including genes that control cell differentiation, adhesion and cell-to-cell communication. There is a discussion about the possibility of existence of cancer in other multicellular organisms or even in protozoa. For example, plant galls have been characterized as tumors, but some authors argue that plants do not develop cancer.
Separation of somatic and germ cells
In some multicellular groups, which are called Weismannists, a separation between a sterile somatic cell line and a germ cell line evolved. However, Weismannist development is relatively rare (e.g., vertebrates, arthropods, Volvox), as a great part of species have the capacity for somatic embryogenesis (e.g., land plants, most algae, many invertebrates).
Origin hypotheses
One hypothesis for the origin of multicellularity is that a group of function-specific cells aggregated into a slug-like mass called a grex, which moved as a multicellular unit. This is essentially what slime molds do. Another hypothesis is that a primitive cell underwent nucleus division, thereby becoming a coenocyte. A membrane would then form around each nucleus (and the cellular space and organelles occupied in the space), thereby resulting in a group of connected cells in one organism (this mechanism is observable in Drosophila). A third hypothesis is that as a unicellular organism divided, the daughter cells failed to separate, resulting in a conglomeration of identical cells in one organism, which could later develop specialized tissues. This is what plant and animal embryos do as well as colonial choanoflagellates.
Because the first multicellular organisms were simple, soft organisms lacking bone, shell, or other hard body parts, they are not well preserved in the fossil record. One exception may be the demosponge, which may have left a chemical signature in ancient rocks. The earliest fossils of multicellular organisms include the contested Grypania spiralis and the fossils of the black shales of the Palaeoproterozoic Francevillian Group Fossil B Formation in Gabon (Gabonionta). The Doushantuo Formation has yielded 600 million year old microfossils with evidence of multicellular traits.
Until recently, phylogenetic reconstruction has been through anatomical (particularly embryological) similarities. This is inexact, as living multicellular organisms such as animals and plants are more than 500 million years removed from their single-cell ancestors. Such a passage of time allows both divergent and convergent evolution time to mimic similarities and accumulate differences between groups of modern and extinct ancestral species. Modern phylogenetics uses sophisticated techniques such as alloenzymes, satellite DNA and other molecular markers to describe traits that are shared between distantly related lineages.[citation needed]
The evolution of multicellularity could have occurred in several different ways, some of which are described below:
The symbiotic theory
This theory suggests that the first multicellular organisms occurred from symbiosis (cooperation) of different species of single-cell organisms, each with different roles. Over time these organisms would become so dependent on each other that they would not be able to survive independently, eventually leading to the incorporation of their genomes into one multicellular organism. Each respective organism would become a separate lineage of differentiated cells within the newly created species.[citation needed]
This kind of severely co-dependent symbiosis can be seen frequently, such as in the relationship between clown fish and Riterri sea anemones. In these cases, it is extremely doubtful whether either species would survive very long if the other became extinct. However, the problem with this theory is that it is still not known how each organism's DNA could be incorporated into one single genome to constitute them as a single species. Although such symbiosis is theorized to have occurred (e.g., mitochondria and chloroplasts in animal and plant cells—endosymbiosis), it has happened only extremely rarely and, even then, the genomes of the endosymbionts have retained an element of distinction, separately replicating their DNA during mitosis of the host species. For instance, the two or three symbiotic organisms forming the composite lichen, although dependent on each other for survival, have to separately reproduce and then re-form to create one individual organism once more.[citation needed]
The cellularization (syncytial) theory
This theory states that a single unicellular organism, with multiple nuclei, could have developed internal membrane partitions around each of its nuclei. Many protists such as the ciliates or slime molds can have several nuclei, lending support to this hypothesis. However, the simple presence of multiple nuclei is not enough to support the theory. Multiple nuclei of ciliates are dissimilar and have clear differentiated functions. The macronucleus serves the organism's needs, whereas the micronucleus is used for sexual reproduction with exchange of genetic material. Slime molds syncitia form from individual amoeboid cells, like syncitial tissues of some multicellular organisms, not the other way round. To be deemed valid, this theory needs a demonstrable example and mechanism of generation of a multicellular organism from a pre-existing syncytium.[citation needed]
The colonial theory
The colonial theory of Haeckel, 1874, proposes that the symbiosis of many organisms of the same species (unlike the symbiotic theory, which suggests the symbiosis of different species) led to a multicellular organism. At least some - it is presumed land-evolved - multicellularity occurs by cells separating and then rejoining (e.g., cellular slime molds) whereas for the majority of multicellular types (those that evolved within aquatic environments), multicellularity occurs as a consequence of cells failing to separate following division. The mechanism of this latter colony formation can be as simple as incomplete cytokinesis, though multicellularity is also typically considered to involve cellular differentiation.
![image](https://www.english.nina.az/wikipedia/image/aHR0cHM6Ly93d3cuZW5nbGlzaC5uaW5hLmF6L3dpa2lwZWRpYS9pbWFnZS9hSFIwY0hNNkx5OTFjR3h2WVdRdWQybHJhVzFsWkdsaExtOXlaeTkzYVd0cGNHVmthV0V2WTI5dGJXOXVjeTkwYUhWdFlpODFMelZqTDBOdmJHOXVhV0ZzUm14aFoyVnNiR0YwWlVoNWNHOTBhR1Z6YVhNdWNHNW5MelkxTUhCNExVTnZiRzl1YVdGc1JteGhaMlZzYkdGMFpVaDVjRzkwYUdWemFYTXVjRzVuLnBuZw==.png)
The advantage of the Colonial Theory hypothesis is that it has been seen to occur independently in 16 different protoctistan phyla. For instance, during food shortages the amoeba Dictyostelium groups together in a colony that moves as one to a new location. Some of these amoeba then slightly differentiate from each other. Other examples of colonial organisation in protista are Volvocaceae, such as Eudorina and Volvox, the latter of which consists of up to 500–50,000 cells (depending on the species), only a fraction of which reproduce. For example, in one species 25–35 cells reproduce, 8 asexually and around 15–25 sexually. However, it can often be hard to separate colonial protists from true multicellular organisms, as the two concepts are not distinct; colonial protists have been dubbed "pluricellular" rather than "multicellular".
The synzoospore theory
Some authors suggest that the origin of multicellularity, at least in Metazoa, occurred due to a transition from temporal to spatial cell differentiation, rather than through a gradual evolution of cell differentiation, as affirmed in Haeckel's gastraea theory.
GK-PID
About 800 million years ago, a minor genetic change in a single molecule called guanylate kinase protein-interaction domain (GK-PID) may have allowed organisms to go from a single cell organism to one of many cells.
The role of viruses
Genes borrowed from viruses and mobile genetic elements (MGEs) have recently been identified as playing a crucial role in the differentiation of multicellular tissues and organs and even in sexual reproduction, in the fusion of egg cells and sperm. Such fused cells are also involved in metazoan membranes such as those that prevent chemicals from crossing the placenta and the brain body separation. Two viral components have been identified. The first is syncytin, which came from a virus. The second identified in 2002 is called , which helps form the skin of Caenorhabditis elegans, part of a whole family of FF proteins. Felix Rey, of the Pasteur Institute in Paris, has constructed the 3D structure of the EFF-1 protein and shown it does the work of linking one cell to another, in viral infections. The fact that all known cell fusion molecules are viral in origin suggests that they have been vitally important to the inter-cellular communication systems that enabled multicellularity. Without the ability of cellular fusion, colonies could have formed, but anything even as complex as a sponge would not have been possible.
Oxygen availability hypothesis
This theory suggests that the oxygen available in the atmosphere of early Earth could have been the limiting factor for the emergence of multicellular life. This hypothesis is based on the correlation between the emergence of multicellular life and the increase of oxygen levels during this time. This would have taken place after the Great Oxidation Event but before the most recent rise in oxygen. Mills concludes that the amount of oxygen present during the Ediacaran is not necessary for complex life and therefore is unlikely to have been the driving factor for the origin of multicellularity.[citation needed]
Snowball Earth hypothesis
A snowball Earth is a geological event where the entire surface of the Earth is covered in snow and ice. The term can either refer to individual events (of which there were at least two) or to the larger geologic period during which all the known total glaciations occurred.
The most recent snowball Earth took place during the Cryogenian period and consisted of two global glaciation events known as the Sturtian and Marinoan glaciations. Xiao et al. suggest that between the period of time known as the "Boring Billion" and the snowball Earth, simple life could have had time to innovate and evolve, which could later lead to the evolution of multicellularity.
The snowball Earth hypothesis in regards to multicellularity proposes that the Cryogenian period in Earth's history could have been the catalyst for the evolution of complex multicellular life. Brocks suggests that the time between the Sturtian Glacian and the more recent Marinoan Glacian allowed for planktonic algae to dominate the seas making way for rapid diversity of life for both plant and animal lineages. Complex life quickly emerged and diversified in what is known as the Cambrian explosion shortly after the Marinoan.[citation needed]
Predation hypothesis
The predation hypothesis suggests that to avoid being eaten by predators, simple single-celled organisms evolved multicellularity to make it harder to be consumed as prey. Herron et al. performed laboratory evolution experiments on the single-celled green alga, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, using paramecium as a predator. They found that in the presence of this predator, C. reinhardtii does indeed evolve simple multicellular features.[citation needed]
Experimental evolution
It is impossible to know what happened when single cells evolved into multicellular organisms hundreds of millions of years ago. However, we can identify mutations that can turn single-celled organisms into multicellular ones. This would demonstrate the possibility of such an event. Unicellular species can relatively easily acquire mutations that make them attach to each other—the first step towards multicellularity. Multiple normally unicellular species have been evolved to exhibit such early steps:
- yeast are long known to exhibit flocculation. One of the first yeast genes found to cause this phenotype is FLO1. A more strikingly clumped phenotype is called "snowflake", caused by the loss of a single transcription factor Ace2. "Snowflake" yeast grow into multicellular clusters that sediment quickly; they were identified by directed evolution. More recently (2024), snowflake yeast were subject to over 3,000 generations of further directed evolution, forming macroscopic assemblies on the scale of millimeters. Changes in multiple genes were identified. In addition, the authors reported that only anaerobic cultures of snowflake yeast evolved this trait, while the aerobic ones did not.
- A range of green algae species have been experimentally evolved to form larger clumps. When Chlorella vulgaris is grown with a predator , it starts forming small colonies, which are harder to ingest due to the larger size. The same is true for Chlamydomonas reinhardtii under predation by Brachionus calyciflorus and .
C. reinhartii normally starts as a motile single-celled propagule; this single cell asexually reproduces by undergoing 2–5 rounds of mitosis as a small clump of non-motile cells, then all cells become single-celled propagules and the clump dissolves. With a few generations under Paramecium predation, the "clump" becomes a persistent structure: only some cells become propagules. Some populations go further and evolved multi-celled propagules: instead of peeling off single cells from the clump, the clump now reproduces by peeling off smaller clumps.
Advantages
Multicellularity allows an organism to exceed the size limits normally imposed by diffusion: single cells with increased size have a decreased surface-to-volume ratio and have difficulty absorbing sufficient nutrients and transporting them throughout the cell. Multicellular organisms thus have the competitive advantages of an increase in size without its limitations. They can have longer lifespans as they can continue living when individual cells die. Multicellularity also permits increasing complexity by allowing differentiation of cell types within one organism.[citation needed]
Whether all of these can be seen as advantages however is debatable: The vast majority of living organisms are single celled, and even in terms of biomass, single celled organisms are far more successful than animals, although not plants. Rather than seeing traits such as longer lifespans and greater size as an advantage, many biologists see these only as examples of diversity, with associated tradeoffs.[citation needed]
Gene expression changes in the transition from uni- to multicellularity
During the evolutionary transition from unicellular organisms to multicellular organisms, the expression of genes associated with reproduction and survival likely changed. In the unicellular state, genes associated with reproduction and survival are expressed in a way that enhances the fitness of individual cells, but after the transition to multicellularity, the pattern of expression of these genes must have substantially changed so that individual cells become more specialized in their function relative to reproduction and survival. As the multicellular organism emerged, gene expression patterns became compartmentalized between cells that specialized in reproduction (germline cells) and those that specialized in survival (somatic cells). As the transition progressed, cells that specialized tended to lose their own individuality and would no longer be able to both survive and reproduce outside the context of the group.
See also
- Bacterial colony
- Embryogenesis
- Organogenesis
- Unicellular organism
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- Bozdag, G. Ozan; Zamani-Dahaj, Seyed Alireza; Day, Thomas C.; Kahn, Penelope C.; Burnetti, Anthony J.; Lac, Dung T.; Tong, Kai; Conlin, Peter L.; Balwani, Aishwarya H.; Dyer, Eva L.; Yunker, Peter J.; Ratcliff, William C. (2023-05-25). "De novo evolution of macroscopic multicellularity". Nature. 617 (7962): 747–754. Bibcode:2023Natur.617..747B. doi:10.1038/s41586-023-06052-1. ISSN 0028-0836. PMC 10425966. PMID 37165189. S2CID 236953093.
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External links
- Tree of Life Eukaryotes. Archived 2012-01-29 at the Wayback Machine.
A multicellular organism is an organism that consists of more than one cell unlike unicellular organisms All species of animals land plants and most fungi are multicellular as are many algae whereas a few organisms are partially uni and partially multicellular like slime molds and social amoebae such as the genus Dictyostelium The nematode Caenorhabditis elegans stained to highlight the nuclei of its cells Multicellular organisms arise in various ways for example by cell division or by aggregation of many single cells Colonial organisms are the result of many identical individuals joining together to form a colony However it can often be hard to separate colonial protists from true multicellular organisms because the two concepts are not distinct colonial protists have been dubbed pluricellular rather than multicellular There are also macroscopic organisms that are multinucleate though technically unicellular such as the Xenophyophorea that can reach 20 cm Evolutionary historyOccurrence Multicellularity has evolved independently at least 25 times in eukaryotes and also in some prokaryotes like cyanobacteria myxobacteria actinomycetes Magnetoglobus multicellularis or Methanosarcina However complex multicellular organisms evolved only in six eukaryotic groups animals symbiomycotan fungi brown algae red algae green algae and land plants It evolved repeatedly for Chloroplastida green algae and land plants once for animals once for brown algae three times in the fungi chytrids ascomycetes and basidiomycetes and perhaps several times for slime molds and red algae The first evidence of multicellular organization which is when unicellular organisms coordinate behaviors and may be an evolutionary precursor to true multicellularity is from cyanobacteria like organisms that lived 3 0 3 5 billion years ago To reproduce true multicellular organisms must solve the problem of regenerating a whole organism from germ cells i e sperm and egg cells an issue that is studied in evolutionary developmental biology Animals have evolved a considerable diversity of cell types in a multicellular body 100 150 different cell types compared with 10 20 in plants and fungi Loss of multicellularity Loss of multicellularity occurred in some groups Fungi are predominantly multicellular though early diverging lineages are largely unicellular e g Microsporidia and there have been numerous reversions to unicellularity across fungi e g Saccharomycotina Cryptococcus and other yeasts It may also have occurred in some red algae e g Porphyridium but they may be primitively unicellular Loss of multicellularity is also considered probable in some green algae e g Chlorella vulgaris and some Ulvophyceae In other groups generally parasites a reduction of multicellularity occurred in the number or types of cells e g the myxozoans multicellular organisms earlier thought to be unicellular are probably extremely reduced cnidarians Cancer Multicellular organisms especially long living animals face the challenge of cancer which occurs when cells fail to regulate their growth within the normal program of development Changes in tissue morphology can be observed during this process Cancer in animals metazoans has often been described as a loss of multicellularity and an atavistic reversion towards a unicellular like state Many genes responsible for the establishment of multicellularity that originated around the appearance of metazoans are deregulated in cancer cells including genes that control cell differentiation adhesion and cell to cell communication There is a discussion about the possibility of existence of cancer in other multicellular organisms or even in protozoa For example plant galls have been characterized as tumors but some authors argue that plants do not develop cancer Separation of somatic and germ cells In some multicellular groups which are called Weismannists a separation between a sterile somatic cell line and a germ cell line evolved However Weismannist development is relatively rare e g vertebrates arthropods Volvox as a great part of species have the capacity for somatic embryogenesis e g land plants most algae many invertebrates Origin hypotheses source source source source Tetrabaena socialis consists of four cells One hypothesis for the origin of multicellularity is that a group of function specific cells aggregated into a slug like mass called a grex which moved as a multicellular unit This is essentially what slime molds do Another hypothesis is that a primitive cell underwent nucleus division thereby becoming a coenocyte A membrane would then form around each nucleus and the cellular space and organelles occupied in the space thereby resulting in a group of connected cells in one organism this mechanism is observable in Drosophila A third hypothesis is that as a unicellular organism divided the daughter cells failed to separate resulting in a conglomeration of identical cells in one organism which could later develop specialized tissues This is what plant and animal embryos do as well as colonial choanoflagellates Because the first multicellular organisms were simple soft organisms lacking bone shell or other hard body parts they are not well preserved in the fossil record One exception may be the demosponge which may have left a chemical signature in ancient rocks The earliest fossils of multicellular organisms include the contested Grypania spiralis and the fossils of the black shales of the Palaeoproterozoic Francevillian Group Fossil B Formation in Gabon Gabonionta The Doushantuo Formation has yielded 600 million year old microfossils with evidence of multicellular traits Until recently phylogenetic reconstruction has been through anatomical particularly embryological similarities This is inexact as living multicellular organisms such as animals and plants are more than 500 million years removed from their single cell ancestors Such a passage of time allows both divergent and convergent evolution time to mimic similarities and accumulate differences between groups of modern and extinct ancestral species Modern phylogenetics uses sophisticated techniques such as alloenzymes satellite DNA and other molecular markers to describe traits that are shared between distantly related lineages citation needed The evolution of multicellularity could have occurred in several different ways some of which are described below The symbiotic theory This theory suggests that the first multicellular organisms occurred from symbiosis cooperation of different species of single cell organisms each with different roles Over time these organisms would become so dependent on each other that they would not be able to survive independently eventually leading to the incorporation of their genomes into one multicellular organism Each respective organism would become a separate lineage of differentiated cells within the newly created species citation needed This kind of severely co dependent symbiosis can be seen frequently such as in the relationship between clown fish and Riterri sea anemones In these cases it is extremely doubtful whether either species would survive very long if the other became extinct However the problem with this theory is that it is still not known how each organism s DNA could be incorporated into one single genome to constitute them as a single species Although such symbiosis is theorized to have occurred e g mitochondria and chloroplasts in animal and plant cells endosymbiosis it has happened only extremely rarely and even then the genomes of the endosymbionts have retained an element of distinction separately replicating their DNA during mitosis of the host species For instance the two or three symbiotic organisms forming the composite lichen although dependent on each other for survival have to separately reproduce and then re form to create one individual organism once more citation needed The cellularization syncytial theory This theory states that a single unicellular organism with multiple nuclei could have developed internal membrane partitions around each of its nuclei Many protists such as the ciliates or slime molds can have several nuclei lending support to this hypothesis However the simple presence of multiple nuclei is not enough to support the theory Multiple nuclei of ciliates are dissimilar and have clear differentiated functions The macronucleus serves the organism s needs whereas the micronucleus is used for sexual reproduction with exchange of genetic material Slime molds syncitia form from individual amoeboid cells like syncitial tissues of some multicellular organisms not the other way round To be deemed valid this theory needs a demonstrable example and mechanism of generation of a multicellular organism from a pre existing syncytium citation needed The colonial theory The colonial theory of Haeckel 1874 proposes that the symbiosis of many organisms of the same species unlike the symbiotic theory which suggests the symbiosis of different species led to a multicellular organism At least some it is presumed land evolved multicellularity occurs by cells separating and then rejoining e g cellular slime molds whereas for the majority of multicellular types those that evolved within aquatic environments multicellularity occurs as a consequence of cells failing to separate following division The mechanism of this latter colony formation can be as simple as incomplete cytokinesis though multicellularity is also typically considered to involve cellular differentiation The advantage of the Colonial Theory hypothesis is that it has been seen to occur independently in 16 different protoctistan phyla For instance during food shortages the amoeba Dictyostelium groups together in a colony that moves as one to a new location Some of these amoeba then slightly differentiate from each other Other examples of colonial organisation in protista are Volvocaceae such as Eudorina and Volvox the latter of which consists of up to 500 50 000 cells depending on the species only a fraction of which reproduce For example in one species 25 35 cells reproduce 8 asexually and around 15 25 sexually However it can often be hard to separate colonial protists from true multicellular organisms as the two concepts are not distinct colonial protists have been dubbed pluricellular rather than multicellular The synzoospore theory Some authors suggest that the origin of multicellularity at least in Metazoa occurred due to a transition from temporal to spatial cell differentiation rather than through a gradual evolution of cell differentiation as affirmed in Haeckel s gastraea theory GK PID About 800 million years ago a minor genetic change in a single molecule called guanylate kinase protein interaction domain GK PID may have allowed organisms to go from a single cell organism to one of many cells The role of viruses Genes borrowed from viruses and mobile genetic elements MGEs have recently been identified as playing a crucial role in the differentiation of multicellular tissues and organs and even in sexual reproduction in the fusion of egg cells and sperm Such fused cells are also involved in metazoan membranes such as those that prevent chemicals from crossing the placenta and the brain body separation Two viral components have been identified The first is syncytin which came from a virus The second identified in 2002 is called which helps form the skin of Caenorhabditis elegans part of a whole family of FF proteins Felix Rey of the Pasteur Institute in Paris has constructed the 3D structure of the EFF 1 protein and shown it does the work of linking one cell to another in viral infections The fact that all known cell fusion molecules are viral in origin suggests that they have been vitally important to the inter cellular communication systems that enabled multicellularity Without the ability of cellular fusion colonies could have formed but anything even as complex as a sponge would not have been possible Oxygen availability hypothesis This theory suggests that the oxygen available in the atmosphere of early Earth could have been the limiting factor for the emergence of multicellular life This hypothesis is based on the correlation between the emergence of multicellular life and the increase of oxygen levels during this time This would have taken place after the Great Oxidation Event but before the most recent rise in oxygen Mills concludes that the amount of oxygen present during the Ediacaran is not necessary for complex life and therefore is unlikely to have been the driving factor for the origin of multicellularity citation needed Snowball Earth hypothesis A snowball Earth is a geological event where the entire surface of the Earth is covered in snow and ice The term can either refer to individual events of which there were at least two or to the larger geologic period during which all the known total glaciations occurred The most recent snowball Earth took place during the Cryogenian period and consisted of two global glaciation events known as the Sturtian and Marinoan glaciations Xiao et al suggest that between the period of time known as the Boring Billion and the snowball Earth simple life could have had time to innovate and evolve which could later lead to the evolution of multicellularity The snowball Earth hypothesis in regards to multicellularity proposes that the Cryogenian period in Earth s history could have been the catalyst for the evolution of complex multicellular life Brocks suggests that the time between the Sturtian Glacian and the more recent Marinoan Glacian allowed for planktonic algae to dominate the seas making way for rapid diversity of life for both plant and animal lineages Complex life quickly emerged and diversified in what is known as the Cambrian explosion shortly after the Marinoan citation needed Predation hypothesis The predation hypothesis suggests that to avoid being eaten by predators simple single celled organisms evolved multicellularity to make it harder to be consumed as prey Herron et al performed laboratory evolution experiments on the single celled green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using paramecium as a predator They found that in the presence of this predator C reinhardtii does indeed evolve simple multicellular features citation needed Experimental evolutionIt is impossible to know what happened when single cells evolved into multicellular organisms hundreds of millions of years ago However we can identify mutations that can turn single celled organisms into multicellular ones This would demonstrate the possibility of such an event Unicellular species can relatively easily acquire mutations that make them attach to each other the first step towards multicellularity Multiple normally unicellular species have been evolved to exhibit such early steps yeast are long known to exhibit flocculation One of the first yeast genes found to cause this phenotype is FLO1 A more strikingly clumped phenotype is called snowflake caused by the loss of a single transcription factor Ace2 Snowflake yeast grow into multicellular clusters that sediment quickly they were identified by directed evolution More recently 2024 snowflake yeast were subject to over 3 000 generations of further directed evolution forming macroscopic assemblies on the scale of millimeters Changes in multiple genes were identified In addition the authors reported that only anaerobic cultures of snowflake yeast evolved this trait while the aerobic ones did not A range of green algae species have been experimentally evolved to form larger clumps When Chlorella vulgaris is grown with a predator it starts forming small colonies which are harder to ingest due to the larger size The same is true for Chlamydomonas reinhardtii under predation by Brachionus calyciflorus and C reinhartii normally starts as a motile single celled propagule this single cell asexually reproduces by undergoing 2 5 rounds of mitosis as a small clump of non motile cells then all cells become single celled propagules and the clump dissolves With a few generations under Paramecium predation the clump becomes a persistent structure only some cells become propagules Some populations go further and evolved multi celled propagules instead of peeling off single cells from the clump the clump now reproduces by peeling off smaller clumps AdvantagesMulticellularity allows an organism to exceed the size limits normally imposed by diffusion single cells with increased size have a decreased surface to volume ratio and have difficulty absorbing sufficient nutrients and transporting them throughout the cell Multicellular organisms thus have the competitive advantages of an increase in size without its limitations They can have longer lifespans as they can continue living when individual cells die Multicellularity also permits increasing complexity by allowing differentiation of cell types within one organism citation needed Whether all of these can be seen as advantages however is debatable The vast majority of living organisms are single celled and even in terms of biomass single celled organisms are far more successful than animals although not plants Rather than seeing traits such as longer lifespans and greater size as an advantage many biologists see these only as examples of diversity with associated tradeoffs citation needed Gene expression changes in the transition from uni to multicellularityDuring the evolutionary transition from unicellular organisms to multicellular organisms the expression of genes associated with reproduction and survival likely changed In the unicellular state genes associated with reproduction and survival are expressed in a way that enhances the fitness of individual cells but after the transition to multicellularity the pattern of expression of these genes must have substantially changed so that individual cells become more specialized in 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Yan Chen Vinces Marcelo D Jansen An Prevost Marie Christine Latge Jean Paul Fink Gerald R Foster Kevin R Verstrepen Kevin J 2008 11 14 FLO1 is a variable green beard gene that drives biofilm like cooperation in budding yeast Cell 135 4 726 737 doi 10 1016 j cell 2008 09 037 ISSN 1097 4172 PMC 2703716 PMID 19013280 Oud Bart Guadalupe Medina Victor Nijkamp Jurgen F De Ridder Dick Pronk Jack T Van Maris Antonius J A Daran Jean Marc 2013 Genome duplication and mutations in ACE2 cause multicellular fast sedimenting phenotypes in evolved Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 110 45 E4223 31 Bibcode 2013PNAS 110E4223O doi 10 1073 pnas 1305949110 PMC 3831460 PMID 24145419 Bozdag G Ozan Zamani Dahaj Seyed Alireza Day Thomas C Kahn Penelope C Burnetti Anthony J Lac Dung T Tong Kai Conlin Peter L Balwani Aishwarya H Dyer Eva L Yunker Peter J Ratcliff William C 2023 05 25 De novo evolution of macroscopic multicellularity Nature 617 7962 747 754 Bibcode 2023Natur 617 747B doi 10 1038 s41586 023 06052 1 ISSN 0028 0836 PMC 10425966 PMID 37165189 S2CID 236953093 Bar On Yinon M Phillips Rob Milo Ron 2018 06 19 The biomass distribution on Earth PNAS 115 25 6506 11 Bibcode 2018PNAS 115 6506B doi 10 1073 pnas 1711842115 PMC 6016768 PMID 29784790 Grochau Wright ZI Nedelcu AM Michod RE April 2023 The Genetics of Fitness Reorganization during the Transition to Multicellularity The Volvocine regA like Family as a Model Genes Basel 14 4 941 doi 10 3390 genes14040941 PMC 10137558 PMID 37107699 External linksTree of Life Eukaryotes Archived 2012 01 29 at the Wayback Machine