endosymbiont

(noun)

an organism that lives within the body or cells of another organism

Related Terms

  • spongin
  • cyanobacteria
  • peroxisome
  • holdfast
  • spicule
  • parazoan

Examples of endosymbiont in the following topics:

  • Genome Reduction

    • These organelles are descended from endosymbionts, which can only survive within the host cell and which the host cell likewise needs for survival.
    • A common explanation for these keen manipulative abilities is the compact and efficient genomic structure consistently found in obligate endosymbionts.
    • One obligate endosymbiont of psyllid, Candidatus Carsonella ruddii, has the smallest genome currently known among cellular organisms at 160kb.
    • The reductive evolution model has been proposed as an effort to define the genomic commonalities seen in all obligate endosymbionts.
    • Based on this model, it is clear that endosymbionts face different adaptive challenges than free-living species.
  • The Evolution of Plastids

    • There is also, as with the case of mitochondria, strong evidence that many of the genes of the endosymbiont transferred to the nucleus.
    • This leads to the question of the possibility of a cell containing an endosymbiont to become engulfed itself, resulting in a secondary endosymbiosis .
    • Some of the major groups of algae became photosynthetic by secondary endosymbiosis; that is, by taking in either green algae or red algae as endosymbionts.
    • The chloroplasts contained within the green algal endosymbionts are capable of photosynthesis, making chlorarachniophytes photosynthetic.
    • The green algal endosymbiont also exhibits a stunted vestigial nucleus.
  • Endophytes and Plants

    • An endophyte is an endosymbiont, often a bacterium or fungus, that lives within a plant for at least part of its life without causing apparent disease.
    • An endophyte is an endosymbiont, often a bacterium or fungus, that lives within a plant for at least part of its life without causing apparent disease .
  • Endosymbiosis and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

    • Christian de Duve proposed that they may have been the first endosymbionts, allowing cells to withstand growing amounts of free molecular oxygen in the earth's atmosphere.
    • It is believed that over millennia these endosymbionts transferred some of their own DNA to the host cell's nucleus during the evolutionary transition from a symbiotic community to an instituted eukaryotic cell (called "serial endosymbiosis").
    • The cyanobacterial endosymbiont already had a double membrane.
  • Sea Coral and Sea Anemone Zooxanthellae

    • The term was loosely used to refer to any golden-brown endosymbionts, including diatoms and other dinoflagellates.
    • Symbiodinium are known primarily for their role as mutualistic endosymbionts.
  • Genome Evolution

    • Another beautiful example are endosymbiont species.
    • For instance, Polynucleobacter necessarius was first described as a cytoplasmic endosymbiont of the ciliate Euplotes aediculatus.
    • The latter species dies soon after being cured of the endosymbiont.
    • The endosymbionts have a significantly reduced genome when compared to their free-living relatives (1.56 Mbp vs. 2.16 Mbp).
  • Endosymbiotic Theory and the Evolution of Eukaryotes

    • This occurs when one species is taken inside the cytoplasm of another species, which ultimately results in a genome consisting of genes from both the endosymbiont and the host.
    • This mechanism is an aspect of the Endosymbiont Theory, which is accepted by a majority of biologists as the mechanism whereby eukaryotic cells obtained their mitochondria and chloroplasts.
    • The double membrane would be a direct result of endosymbiosis, with the endosymbiont picking up the second membrane from the host as it was internalized.
  • Epsilonproteobacteria

    • A member of the class Epsilonproteobacteria occurs as an endosymbiont in the large gills of the deep water sea snail Alviniconcha hessleri.
  • Gammaproteobacteria

    • Phylogenetically, in the Enterobacteriales, several peptidoglycan-less insect endosymbionts form a sister clade to the Enterobacteriaceae, but since they are not validly described, this group is not officially a taxon; examples of these species are Sodalis, Buchnera, Wigglesworthia, Baumannia and Blochmannia.
  • Verrucomicrobia

    • A number of as-yet uncultivated species have been identified in association with eukaryotic hosts including extrusive explosive ectosymbionts of protists and endosymbionts of nematodes residing in their gametes.
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