Read Power, Sex, Suicide: Mitochondria and the Meaning of Life Online
Authors: Nick Lane
Tags: #Science, #General
The nature of mitochondriaWallin, Ivan.
Symbionticism and the Origin of Species
. Bailliere, Tindall and Cox, London, UK, 1927.
Attardi, G. The elucidation of the human mitochondrial genome: A historical perspective.
Bioessays
5:
34–39; 1986.
Baldauf, S. L. The deep roots of eukaryotes.
Science
300
: 1703–1706; 2003.
Cooper, C. The return of the mitochondrion.
The Biochemist
27(3)
: 5–6; 2005.
Dyall, S. D., Brown, M. T., and Johnson, P. J. Ancient invasions: From endosymbionts to organelles.
Science
304:
253–257; 2004.
Griparic, L., and van der Bliek, A. M. The many shapes of mitochondrial membranes.
Traffic
2:
235–244; 2001.
Kiberstis, P. A. Mitochondria make a comeback.
Science
283:
1475; 1999.
Sagan, L. On the origin of mitosing cells.
Journal of Theoretical Biology
14:
225–274; 1967.
Schatz, G. The tragic matter.
FEBS (Federation of European Biochemical Societies) Letters
536:
1–2; 2003.
Part 1Scheffler, I. E. A century of mitochondrial research: achievements and perspectives.
Mitochondrion
1:
3–31; 2000.
Dawkins, Richard.
The Ancestor’s Tale: A Pilgrimage to the Dawn of Life
. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, UK, 2004.
de Duve, Christian.
Life Evolving: Molecules, Mind, and Meaning
. Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 2002.
Gould, Stephen Jay.
Wonderful Life. The Burgess Shale and the Nature of History
.
Penguin, London, UK, 1989.
Knoll, Andrew H.
Life on a Young Planet: The First Three Billion Years of Evolution on Earth
. Princeton University Press, Princeton, USA, 2003.
Lane, Nick.
Oxygen: The Molecule that Made the World
. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 2002.
Margulis, Lynn.
Origin of Eukaryotic Cells
. Yale University Press, Yale, USA, 1970.
Mayr, Ernst.
What Evolution Is
. Weidenfeld & Nicolson, London, UK, 2002.
The origin of eukaryotic cellsMorris, Simon Conway.
Life’s Solution: Inevitable Humans in a Lonely Universe
. Cambridge University Press, Cambridge, UK, 2003.
Martin, W., Hoffmeister, M., Rotte, C., and Henze, K. An overview of endosymbiotic models for the origins of eukaryotes, their ATP-producing organelles (mitochondria and hydrogenosomes) and their heterotrophic lifestyle.
Biological Chemistry
382:
1521–1539; 2001.
Sagan, L. On the origin of mitosing cells.
Journal of Theoretical Biology
14:
255–274; 1967.
Catastrophic loss of the cell wallVellai, T., and Vida, G. The origin of eukaryotes: The difference between prokaryotic and eukaryotic cells.
Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences
266:
1571–1577; 1999.
Cavalier-Smith, T. The phagotrophic origin of eukaryotes and phylogenetic classification of Protozoa.
International Journal of Systematic and Evolutionary Microbiology
52:
297–354; 2002.
Bacterial cytoskeletonMaynard-Smith, John, and Szathmáry, Eörs.
The Origins of Life
,
Chapter 6
: The Origin of Eukaryotic Cells. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 1999.
van den Ent, F., Amos, L. A., and Lowe, J. Prokaryotic origin of the actin cytoskeleton.
Nature
413:
39–44; 2001.
Discovery of the archaeaJones, L. J., Carballido-Lopez, R., and Errington, J. Control of cell shape in bacteria: Helical, actin-like filaments in
Bacillus subtilis
.
Cell
104:
913–922; 2001.
Keeling, P. J., and Doolittle, W. F. Archaea: Narrowing the gap between prokaryotes and eukaryotes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
92:
5761–5764; 1995.
The archezoaWoese, C. R., and Fox, G. E. Phylogenetic structure of the prokaryotic domain: The primary kingdoms.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
74:
5088–5090; 1977.
Cavalier-Smith, T. A 6-kingdom classification and a unified phylogeny. In H. E. A. Schenk and W. Schwemmler (eds.),
Endocytobiology II
, pp. 1027–1034. Walter de Gruyter, Berlin, Germany, 1983.
—— Eukaryotes with no mitochondria.
Nature
326:
332–333; 1987.
Rickettsia—— Archaebacteria and Archezoa.
Nature
339:
100–101; 1989.
Andersson, J. O., and Andersson, S. G. A century of typhus, lice and
Rickettsia
.
Research in Microbiology
151:
143–150; 2000.
Andersson, S. G., Zomorodipour, A., Andersson J. O., Sicheritz-Ponten, T., Alsmark U. C., Podowski, R. M., Naslund, A. K., Eriksson, A. S., Winkler, H. H., Kurland, C. G. The genome sequence of
Rickettsia prowazekii
and the origin of mitochondria.
Nature
396:
133–140; 1998.
Collapse of the archezoaAndersson, S. G. E., Karlberg, O., Canback, B., and Kurland, C. G. On the origin of mitochondria: A genomics perspective.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences
358:
165–179; 2003.
Clark, C. G., and Roger, A. J. Direct evidence for secondary loss of mitochondria in
Entamoeba hitolytica
.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
92:
6518–6521; 1995.
Methanogens as the host cellKeeling, P. J. A kingdom’s progress: Archezoa and the origin of eukaryotes.
Bioessays
20:
87–95; 1998.
Martin, W., and Embley, T. M. Early evolution comes full circle.
Nature
431
: 134–136; 2004.
Pereira, S. L., Grayling, R. A., Lurz, R., and Reeve, J. N. Archaeal nucleosomes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
94:
12633–12637; 1997.
Rivera, M., Jain, R., Moore, J. E., and Lake, J. A. Genomic evidence for two functionally distinct gene classes.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
95:
6239–6244; 1998.
Hydrogen hypothesisRivera, M. C., and Lake, J. A. The ring of life provides evidence for a genome fusion origin of eukaryotes.
Nature
431
: 152; 2004.
Akhmanova, A., Voncken, F., van Alen, T., van Hoek, A., Boxma, B., Vogels, G., Veenhuis, M., and Hackstein, J. H. A hydrogenosome with a genome.
Nature
396:
527–528; 1998.
Boxma, B., de Graat, R. M., and van der Staay, G. W., et al. An anaerobic mitochondrion that produces hydrogen.
Nature
434
: 74–79; 2005.
Embley, T. M., and Martin, W. A hydrogen-producing mitochondrion.
Nature
396:
517–519; 1998.
Gray, M. W. Evolutionary biology: The hydrogenosome’s murky past.
Nature
434
: 29–31; 2005.
Martin, W., and Müller, M. The hydrogen hypothesis for the first eukaryote.
Nature
392:
37–41; 1998.
—— Russell, M. J. On the origins of cells: A hypothesis for the evolutionary transitions from abiotic geochemistry to chemoautotrophic prokaryotes, and from prokaryotes to nucleated cells.
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B
358:
59–85; 2003.
Anaerobic mitochondriaMüller, M., and Martin, W. The genome of
Rickettsia prowazekii
and some thoughts on the origin of mitochondria and hydrogenosomes.
Bioessays
21:
377–381; 1999.
Horner, D. S., Heil, B., Happe, T., and Embley, T. M. Iron hydrogenases—ancient enzymes in modern eukaryotes.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences
27:
148–153; 2002.
Sutak, R., Dolezal, P., Fiumera, H. L., Hardy, I., Dancis, A., Delgadillo-Correa, M., Johnson, P. J., Mujller, M., and Tachezy, J. Mitochondrial-type assembly of FeS centers in the hydrogenosomes of the amitochondriate eukaryote
Trichomonas vaginalis
.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the USA
101:
10368–10373; 2004.
Theissen, U., Hoffmeister, M., Grieshaber, M., and Martin, W. Single eubacterial origin of eukaryotic sulfide: Quinone oxidoreductase, a mitochondrial enzyme conserved from the early evolution of eukaryotes during anoxic and sulfidic times.
Molecular Biology and Evolution
20(9):
1564–1574; 2003.
Tielens, A. G., Rotte, C., van Hellemond, J. J., and Martin, W. Mitochondria as we don’t know them.
Trends in Biochemical Sciences
27:
564–572; 2002.
Ocean chemistryVan der Giezen, M., Slotboom, D. J., Horner, D. S., Dyal, P. L., Harding, M., Xue, G. P., Embley, T. M., and Kunji, E. R. Conserved properties of hydrogenosomal and mitochondrial ADP/ATP carriers: A common origin for both organelles.
EMBO (European Molecular Biology Organization) Journal
21:
572–579; 2002.
Anbar, A. D., and Knoll, A. H. Proterozoic ocean chemistry and evolution: A bioinorganic bridge?
Science
297:
1137–1142; 2002.
Canfield, D. E. A new model of Proterozoic ocean chemistry.
Nature
396:
450–452; 1998.
Part 2—— Habicht K. S., and Thamdrup B. The Archean sulfur cycle and the early history of atmospheric oxygen.
Science
288:
658–661; 2000.
de Duve, Christian.
Life Evolving: Molecules, Mind, and Meaning
. Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 2002.
Harold, Franklin M.
The Way of the Cell. Molecules, Organisms, and the Order of Life
. Oxford University Press, New York, USA, 2001.
——
The Vital Force: A Study of Bioenergetics
. W. H. Freeman and Co., New York, USA, 1986.
Lane, Nick.
Oxygen: The Molecule that Made the World
. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 2002.
Nicholls, David, and Ferguson, Stuart J.
Bioenergetics 3
. Academic Press, Oxford, UK, 2002.
Prebble, John, and Weber, Bruce.
Wandering in the Gardens of the Mind—Peter Mitchell and the Making of Glynn
. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 2003.
Energy production and the sunWolpert, Lewis and Richards, Alison.
Passionate Minds: The Inner World of Scientists
. Oxford University Press, Oxford, UK, 1997.
Lavoisier and the discovery of respirationSchatz, G. The tragic matter.
FEBS (Federation of European Biochemical Societies) Letters
536:
1–2; 2003.
Jaffe, Bernard.
Crucibles
. Newton Publishing Co., New York, USA, 1932.
Lavoisier, A.
Elements of Chemistry
. Dover Publications Inc., New York, USA, 1965.
Discovery of the respiratory chainMorris, R.
The Last Sorcerers: The Path from Alchemy to the Periodic Table
. Joseph Henry Press, Washington DC, USA, 2003.
Gest, H. Landmark discoveries in the trail from chemistry to cellular biochemistry, with particular reference to mileposts in research on bioenergetics.
Biochemistry and Molecular Biology Education
30:
9–13; 2002.