Another interesting article.
Abstract
- First, the criteria by which we judge
eukaryogenesis to have required a genuinely unlikely series of events 2
billion years in the making are being eroded by discoveries that fill in
the gaps of the prokaryote:eukaryote “discontinuity.”
- Second,
eukaryogenesis confronts evolutionary theory in ways not different from
other evolutionary transitions in individuality; parallel systems can be
found at several hierarchical levels.
- Third, identifying which of
several complex cellular features confer on eukaryotes a putative richer
evolutionary potential remains an area of speculation: various keys to
success have been proposed and rejected over the five-decade history of
research in this area.
- Fourth, and perhaps most importantly, it is difficult and may be impossible to eliminate eukaryocentric bias from the measures by which eukaryotes as a whole are judged to have achieved greater success than prokaryotes as a whole.