IN JUST a few weeks single-celled yeast have evolved  into a multicellular organism, complete with division of labour between  cells. This suggests that the evolutionary leap to multicellularity may be a surprisingly small hurdle.
 One giant leap for yeastkind 
Multicellularity has evolved at least  20 times since life began, but the last time was about 200 million years  ago, leaving few clues to the precise sequence of events. To understand  the process better, William Ratcliff  and colleagues at the University of Minnesota in St Paul set out to  evolve multicellularity in a common unicellular lab organism, brewer's  yeast.
Their approach was simple: they grew  the yeast in a liquid and once each day gently centrifuged each culture,  inoculating the next batch with the yeast that settled out on the  bottom of each tube. Just as large sand particles settle faster than  tiny silt, groups of cells settle faster than single ones, so the team  effectively selected for yeast that clumped together.
Sure enough, within 60 days - about  350 generations - every one of their 10 culture lines had evolved a  clumped, "snowflake" form. Crucially, the snowflakes formed not from  unrelated cells banding together but from cells that remained connected  to one another after division, so that all the cells in a snowflake were  genetically identical relatives. This relatedness provides the  conditions necessary for individual cells to cooperate for the good of  the whole snowflake.
"The key step in the evolution of  multicellularity is a shift in the level of selection from unicells to  groups. Once that occurs, you can consider the clumps to be primitive  multicellular organisms," says Ratcliff.
In some ways, the snowflakes do behave  as if they are multicellular. They grow bigger by cell division and  when the snowflakes reach a certain size a portion breaks off to form a  daughter cell. This "life cycle" is much like the juvenile and adult  stages of many multicellular organisms.
After a few hundred further  generations of selection, the snowflakes also began to show a  rudimentary division of labour. As the snowflakes reach their "adult"  size, some cells undergo programmed cell death, providing weak points  where daughters can break off. This lets the snowflakes make more  offspring while leaving the parent large enough to sink quickly to the  base of the tube, ensuring its survival. Snowflake lineages exposed to  different evolutionary pressures evolved different levels of cell death.  Since it is rarely to the advantage of an individual cell to die, this  is a clear case of cooperation for the good of the larger organism. This  is a key sign that the snowflakes are evolving as a unit, Ratcliff  reported last week at a meeting of the Society for the Study of Evolution in Norman, Oklahoma.
Other researchers familiar with the  work were generally enthusiastic. "It really seemed to me to have the  elements of the unfolding in real time of a major transition," says Ben Kerr,  an evolutionary biologist at the University of Washington in Seattle.  "The fact that it happened so quickly was really exciting."
Sceptics, however, point out that many  yeast strains naturally form colonies, and that their ancestors were  multicellular tens or hundreds of millions of years ago. As a result,  they may have retained some evolved mechanisms for cell adhesion and  programmed cell death, effectively stacking the deck in favour of  Ratcliff's experiment.
"I bet that yeast, having once been multicellular, never lost it completely," says Neil Blackstone,  an evolutionary biologist at Northern Illinois University in DeKalb. "I  don't think if you took something that had never been multicellular you  would get it so quickly."
Even so, much of evolution proceeds by  co-opting existing traits for new uses - and that's exactly what  Ratcliff's yeast do. "I wouldn't expect these things to all pop up de  novo, but for the cell to have many of the elements already present for  other reasons," says Kerr.
Ratcliff and his colleagues are planning to address that objection head-on, by doing similar experiments with Chlamydomonas,  a single-celled alga that has no multicellular ancestors. They are also  continuing their yeast experiments to see whether further division of  labour will evolve within the snowflakes. Both approaches offer an  unprecedented opportunity to bring experimental rigour to the study of one of the most important leaps in our distant evolutionary past.
Source New Scientist 
 

 
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