The merging of two independent populations of heterotrophs and autotrophs into a single population of mixotrophs has occurred frequently in evolutionary history. It is an example of a wide class of related phenomena, known as symbiogenesis. The physiological basis is almost always (reciprocal) syntrophy, where each species uses the products of the other species. Symbiogenesis can repeat itself after specialization on particular assimilatory substrates. We discuss quantitative aspects and delineate eight steps from two free-living interacting populations to a single fully integrated endosymbiotic one. The whole process of gradual interlocking of the two populations could be mimicked by incremental changes of particular parameter values. The ...
In mutualism between unicellular hosts and their endosymbionts, symbiont's cell division is often sy...
A model for the coevolution of two species in facultative symbiosis is used to investigate condition...
Ancient evolutionary events are difficult to study because their current products are derived forms...
Symbiosis is the phenomenon in which organisms of different species live together in close associati...
The concept of symbiosis – defined in 1879 by de Bary as ‘the living together of unlike organisms’ –...
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 1995. Symbiosis is the phenomenon in which organisms of differen...
Symbiosis is the phenomenon in which organisms of different species live together in close associati...
A connection is hypothesized between the physiological consequences of mutualistic symbiosis and lif...
Living organisms constantly interact with their habitats, selectively taking up compounds from their...
THESIS 8781Symbiosis is one of the ways in which nature has been able to generate biological innovat...
Symbiogenesis, literally ‘becoming by living together’, refers to the crucial role of symbiosis in m...
This paper reviews and extends ideas of eukaryotization by endosymbiosis. These ideas are put within...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
SummaryThe phenomenon of endosymbiosis, or one organism living within another, has deeply impacted t...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
In mutualism between unicellular hosts and their endosymbionts, symbiont's cell division is often sy...
A model for the coevolution of two species in facultative symbiosis is used to investigate condition...
Ancient evolutionary events are difficult to study because their current products are derived forms...
Symbiosis is the phenomenon in which organisms of different species live together in close associati...
The concept of symbiosis – defined in 1879 by de Bary as ‘the living together of unlike organisms’ –...
© Springer-Verlag Berlin Heidelberg 1995. Symbiosis is the phenomenon in which organisms of differen...
Symbiosis is the phenomenon in which organisms of different species live together in close associati...
A connection is hypothesized between the physiological consequences of mutualistic symbiosis and lif...
Living organisms constantly interact with their habitats, selectively taking up compounds from their...
THESIS 8781Symbiosis is one of the ways in which nature has been able to generate biological innovat...
Symbiogenesis, literally ‘becoming by living together’, refers to the crucial role of symbiosis in m...
This paper reviews and extends ideas of eukaryotization by endosymbiosis. These ideas are put within...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
SummaryThe phenomenon of endosymbiosis, or one organism living within another, has deeply impacted t...
Humans depend on microbial communities for numerous ecosystem services such as global nutrient cycle...
In mutualism between unicellular hosts and their endosymbionts, symbiont's cell division is often sy...
A model for the coevolution of two species in facultative symbiosis is used to investigate condition...
Ancient evolutionary events are difficult to study because their current products are derived forms...