Prokaryote - biology.
Publié le 11/05/2013
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earliest organisms to evolve, an estimated 3.4 billion to 3.5 billion years ago.
The environment of the early Earth lacked oxygen, and cyanobacteria probably usedfermentation (a chemical process performed without the presence of oxygen) to produce the energy molecule adenosine triphosphate (ATP).
Cyanobacteria introduced oxygen into the atmosphere through the process of photosynthesis.
As the oxygen content in the atmosphere increased over the centuries, bacteria evolved that usedthis oxygen in the process known as aerobic respiration, a more efficient method than fermentation for producing ATP.
Aerobic respiration set the stage for theevolution of eukaryotic cells—larger, more complex cells that require efficient energy production to carry out their life processes.
A few molecular studies of the evolutionary development of the genes of archaebacteria suggest that archaebacteria may have evolved 3.5 billion years ago, slightlybefore cyanobacteria.
Like cyanobacteria, archaebacteria probably relied on fermentation to synthesize ATP.
In a widely held theory known as endosymbiosis, scientists propose that simple eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotes that engulfed other prokaryotes.
According to thistheory, the engulfed prokaryotes, which remained active in their hosts, underwent changes over time and became the mitochondria (energy-producing organelles) of protozoa, or animal-like protists, from which animals evolved.
The theory further holds that when photosynthetic bacteria were engulfed by other prokaryotes, thebacteria continued to photosynthesize within the cells that had engulfed them.
The engulfed photosynthetic bacteria evolved into the chloroplasts of photosyntheticprotists, the ancestors of plants.
VI IMPORTANCE OF PROKARYOTES
Prokaryotes play significant roles in our daily lives.
In a process called nitrogen fixation, many species of cyanobacteria convert atmospheric nitrogen to nitrogenouscompounds that other organisms use as food sources.
Moreover, the photosynthesis occurring in cyanobacteria still contributes substantial amounts of oxygen to theatmosphere and stores the Sun’s energy in carbohydrate molecules.
Cyanobacteria are the foundation for aquatic ecosystems, providing food for protozoa and otheraquatic organisms.
Cyanobacteria are threatened, however, by ultraviolet radiation, which penetrates the atmosphere as a result of the thinning ozone layer.
Other prokaryotes act as recyclers of carbon, nitrogen, phosphorus, sulfur, and other elements.
Many prokaryotes have medical and economic importance to humans.For instance, disease-causing bacteria have played a significant role in human history, causing diseases such as tuberculosis, gonorrhea, plague, whooping cough,pneumonia, syphilis, and botulism.
Certain bacteria, including the soil bacteria Actinomycetes , produce antibiotics.
Other bacteria are used industrially to synthesize vitamins, enzymes, organic acids, and food products and to produce drugs by the processes of genetic engineering.
Archaebacteria support ecosystems in hot springsand hydrothermal vents, where a variety of organisms feed on them.
Methane-producing archaebacteria are used widely in sewage treatment plants to convert sewagesludge into methane ( see Bioremediation).
Contributed By:I.
Edward AlcamoMicrosoft ® Encarta ® 2009. © 1993-2008 Microsoft Corporation.
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