NASA Research Reveals Major Insight Into Evolution Of Life On Earth

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August 19, 2009

Dwayne Brown 
Headquarters, Washington 
202-358-1726 
dwayne.c.brown@xxxxxxxx 

Michael Mewhinney      
Ames Research Center, Moffett Field, Calif. 
650-604-3937 
michael.s.mewhinney@xxxxxxxx 

Stuart Wolpert 
University of California, Los Angeles 
310-206-0511 
swolpert@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx  


RELEASE: 09-192

NASA RESEARCH REVEALS MAJOR INSIGHT INTO EVOLUTION OF LIFE ON EARTH

MOFFETT FIELD, Calif. -- Humans might not be walking on Earth today if 
not for the ancient fusing of two microscopic, single-celled 
organisms called prokaryotes, NASA-funded research has found. 

By comparing proteins present in more than 3000 different prokaryotes 
- a type of single-celled organism without a nucleus - molecular 
biologist James A. Lake from the University of California at Los 
Angeles' Center for Astrobiology showed that two major classes of 
relatively simple microbes fused together more than 2.5 billion years 
ago. Lake's research reveals a new pathway for the evolution of life 
on Earth. These insights are published in the Aug. 20 online edition 
of the journal Nature. 

This endosymbiosis, or merging of two cells, enabled the evolution of 
a highly stable and successful organism with the capacity to use 
energy from sunlight via photosynthesis. Further evolution led to 
photosynthetic organisms producing oxygen as a byproduct. The 
resulting oxygenation of Earth's atmosphere profoundly affected the 
evolution of life, leading to more complex organisms that consumed 
oxygen, which were the ancestors of modern oxygen-breathing creatures 
including humans. 

"Higher life would not have happened without this event," Lake said. 
"These are very important organisms. At the time these two early 
prokaryotes were evolving, there was no oxygen in the Earth's 
atmosphere. Humans could not live. No oxygen-breathing organisms 
could live." 

The genetic machinery and structural organization of these two 
organisms merged to produce a new class of prokaryotes, called double 
membrane prokaryotes. As they evolved, members of this double 
membrane class, called cyanobacteria, became the primary 
oxygen-producers on the planet, generating enough oxygen to alter the 
chemical composition of the atmosphere and set the stage for the 
evolution of more complex organisms such as animals and plants. 

"This work is a major advance in our understanding of how a group of 
organisms came to be that learned to harness the sun and then 
effected the greatest environmental change Earth has ever seen, in 
this case with beneficial results," said Carl Pilcher, director of 
the NASA Astrobiology Institute at NASA's Ames Research Center in 
Moffett Field, Calif., which co-funded the study with the National 
Science Foundation in Arlington, Va. 

Founded in 1998, the NASA Astrobiology Institute is a partnership 
between NASA, 14 U.S. teams and six international consortia. The 
institute's goals are to promote, conduct, and lead interdisciplinary 
astrobiology research; train a new generation of astrobiology 
researchers; and share the excitement of astrobiology with learners 
of all ages. 

The institute is part of NASA's Astrobiology Program in Washington. 
The program supports research into the origin, evolution, 
distribution and future of life on Earth and the potential for life 
elsewhere. 

For more information about the NASA's Astrobiology Program and the 
institute, visit: 


http://astrobiology.nasa.gov 

	
-end-



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