Major evolutionary transitions of life, metabolic scaling and the number and size of mitochondria and chloroplasts

Author:

Okie Jordan G.123,Smith Val H.4,Martin-Cereceda Mercedes45

Affiliation:

1. School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

2. School of Life Sciences, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

3. School for the Future of Innovation in Society, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ, USA

4. Department of Ecology and Evolutionary Biology, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS 66045, USA

5. Department of Microbiology, Faculty of Biology, Complutense University of Madrid, Madrid, Spain

Abstract

We investigate the effects of trophic lifestyle and two types of major evolutionary transitions in individuality—the endosymbiotic acquisition of organelles and development of multicellularity—on organellar and cellular metabolism and allometry. We develop a quantitative framework linking the size and metabolic scaling of eukaryotic cells to the abundance, size and metabolic scaling of mitochondria and chloroplasts and analyse a newly compiled, unprecedented database representing unicellular and multicellular cells covering diverse phyla and tissues. Irrespective of cellularity, numbers and total volumes of mitochondria scale linearly with cell volume, whereas chloroplasts scale sublinearly and sizes of both organelles remain largely invariant with cell size. Our framework allows us to estimate the metabolic scaling exponents of organelles and cells. Photoautotrophic cells and organelles exhibit photosynthetic scaling exponents always less than one, whereas chemoheterotrophic cells and organelles have steeper respiratory scaling exponents close to one. Multicellularity has no discernible effect on the metabolic scaling of organelles and cells. In contrast, trophic lifestyle has a profound and uniform effect, and our results suggest that endosymbiosis fundamentally altered the metabolic scaling of free-living bacterial ancestors of mitochondria and chloroplasts, from steep ancestral scaling to a shallower scaling in their endosymbiotic descendants.

Funder

Ames Research Center

Publisher

The Royal Society

Subject

General Agricultural and Biological Sciences,General Environmental Science,General Immunology and Microbiology,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Medicine

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