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A Sourcebook for the Worldwide Discovery of a Creative Organic Universe
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V. Life's Corporeal Evolution Develops, Encodes and Organizes Itself: An Earthtwinian Genesis Synthesis

3. Cellular Self-Organization and Holobiont Symbiogenesis

Earth, Life & System: An Interdisciplinary Symposium on Environment and Evolution in Honor of Lynn Margulis. www.depts.ttu.edu/vpr/faculty/scholarly-messenger/Downloads/ELSbookle.pdf. A conference in honor of the late Lynn Margulis, held at Texas Tech University, September 2012. The whole program with Abstracts is available at this website. Relevant speakers paid their respects to the founder and defender of the importance of symbiotic assemblies in life’s cellular origin and sustenance, and for consequent ecosystems from microbes to Gaia. For example, Jan Sapp spoke on “On the Origins of Biological Kingdoms and Domains,” Susan Squier gave “The ‘World Egg’ Reconsidered: Waddington, Margulis, and Feminist New Materialism,” Susan Oyama on “Sustainable Development: Alternative Pathways in Developmental Systems Theory” (see Abstract below), and Peter Westbroek’s “Coming to Terms with Global Change: Technology is Not Enough.” Geneticist James Shapiro’s paper “Bringing Cell Action into Evolution” is noted below.

“Sustainable development” is intentionally ambiguous; much of the talk is about multiple meanings within and outside biology. The developmental analog of that multiplicity is flexibility, whose importance in evolution will be explored. Some key terms will also get attention, including transmission, construction, interaction, and contingency. Contingency is often associated with chance or randomness, but the operative meaning here is causal dependency. Organisms are ontogenetically contingent; countless dependencies can be studied within the skin and extending out beyond it to an indefinite series of conditions and processes that are themselves contingent on other factors. Yet these densely interlocked and variable complexes can generate both the variation and the stability and recurrence needed for evolution. The discussion concludes with a consideration of sustainable development, intended not only in its usual contexts of agriculture and economic growth, but also in developmental and evolutionary studies. It is both possible and satisfying to see such regularity, when it occurs, in terms of interconnected systems of contingent influences. These last include symbiotic associations, among the most sustained, and sustaining, examples of long-term resource management we have. (Susan Oyama)

Individuals and Groups. www.icts.res.in/archive/program/details/315. As a May 2012 conference held at the G. B. Pant Institute of Himalayan Environment and Development, Uttarakhand, Almora, India, sponsored by the International Centre for Theoretical Sciences of the Tata Institute of Fundamental Research. A global gathering indeed as scientists and scholars such as Stuart Newman, Scott Gilbert, Ellen Clarke, Patrick Bateson, Paul Rainey travelled from afar to consider nature’s apparent penchant for symbiotic ensembles of autonomous entities in relational communities. In this new age of convergent integration, its self-organized universality is then seen to extend to, and spring from, chemical and physical grounds. Visit this site to view other Programs such as Quantitative Systems Biology, Physics of Life, Quantum Computation, and Mathematics of the Planet Earth.

A special issue of the Journal of Biosciences (39/2, April 2014), published by the Indian Academy of Sciences, contains a dozen presentations as a premier collection upon this organic reciprocity we would do well to implement. Vidyanand Nanjundiah and Newman introduce as “E Pluribus Unum” (Out of many, one). Gilbert again extols Symbiosis as the Way of Eukaryotic Life, while Rainey and Silvia De Monte wax on Nascent Multicellular Life and the Emergence of Individuality. Its substantial roots are traced in Group Behavior in Physical, Chemical and Biological Systems by Chian Saclioglu, et al, and An Ensemble Approach to the Evolution of Complex Systems by Goker Arpag and Ayse Erzan. A guide is the sequence of evolutionary transitions to individual entities, whence they are seen as nested communal reciprocities of wholes within Wholes. An historic precursor is the Arabic philosophy of Ibn Khaldun (1332-1406) in a paper by George Katsiaficas (search).

It is common in biology for more than one potential or actual unit of reproduction to form part of a larger whole that is composed of similar or dissimilar units. In many cases the whole displays group-level traits that are not seen in its constituents. One looks for explanations of a particular trait in terms of proximate causes, namely the underlying physics and chemistry, and separately in terms of the evolutionary history of the group. We will begin with overviews of how the individual versus group distinction is tackled in physics and chemistry. Next, different levels of biological organisation will be considered ranging from molecules to genes, proteins, metabolic pathways, cells, organisms and ecological communities. The phenomena to be examined will include collective oscillations, the reliability and stability of genetic and metabolic networks, multicellular development, normal and pathological social behaviour among cells and organisms and, finally, multi-species interactions. At least two talks will be devoted to the history of the concept of individuality. (Conference Abstract)

Molecular analyses of symbiotic relationships are challenging our biological definitions of individuality and supplanting them with a new notion of normal part–whole relationships. This new notion is that of a ‘holobiont’, a consortium of organisms that becomes a functionally integrated ‘whole’. This holobiont includes the zoological organism (the ‘animal’) as well as its persistent microbial symbionts. This new individuality is seen on anatomical and physiological levels, where a diversity of symbionts form a new ‘organ system’ within the zoological organism and become integrated into its metabolism and development. Symbionts have also been found to constitute a second mode of genetic inheritance, providing selectable genetic variation for natural selection. We develop, grow and evolve as multi-genomic consortia/teams/ecosystems. (Gilbert Abstract)

Groups exhibit properties that either are not perceived to exist, or perhaps cannot exist, at the individual level. Such ‘emergent’ properties depend on how individuals interact, both among themselves and with their surroundings. The world of everyday objects consists of material entities. These are, ultimately, groups of elementary particles that organize themselves into atoms and molecules, occupy space, and so on. It turns out that an explanation of even the most commonplace features of this world requires relativistic quantum field theory and the fact that Planck’s constant is discrete, not zero. Groups of molecules in solution, in particular polymers (‘sols’), can form viscous clusters that behave like elastic solids (‘gels’). Group behaviour among cells or organisms is often heritable and therefore can evolve. This permits an additional, typically biological, explanation for it in terms of reproductive advantage, whether of the individual or of the group. (Saclioglu, et al Abstract)

Proto Tista. www.prototista.org. An extensive scientific website with topical introductions to symbiogenesis, Gais, emergence, self-organization, chaos, fractals, autopoiesis, among other similar realms.

, Pfannschmidt. Thomas, et al. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B.. May, 2020. We cite this introduction to a special collection as a good example of how much these mutualistic processes are now being found to pervade and serve the formation and activity of eukaryotic cells, a feature not considered at all a few years ago.

Albert, Reka. Scale-Free Networks in Cell Biology. Journal of Cell Science. 118/4947, 2005. The fields of genomics, transcriptomics and proteomics are providing a vast quantity of intracellular molecular data, which can now be mapped by interaction graphs. These structures are not random but take on the dynamic geometry of invariant, redundant relationships as seen everywhere else. With the many internal components of a cell being identified and interrelated, the presence of a universal interconnectivity becomes evident. A prime feature is a nested, hierarchical modularity of nets within nets. An editorial for this issue avers that a challenge for the new cell biology, set forth in a turn of the millennium editorial (113/749): ….to go beyond ‘toon’ (diagram) explanations, to understand the emergent, self-organizing properties of interdependent systems, is being fulfilled by such as the subject article. As a reflection, these advances, as they integrate the many cellular particles and pieces, via a collaborative humankind, they contribute to a cosmic Copernican Revolution from moribund machine to organic genesis. For a popular update, see "Networks in Motion" by Albert and Adilson Motter in Physics Today, April 2012.

The architectural features of molecular interaction networks are shared to a large degree by other complex systems ranging from technological to social networks. (4953)

Allen, John and John Raven, eds. Introduction. Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society of London B. 358/59, 2003. Chloroplasts and Mitochondria: Functional Genomics and Evolution is the topic of this issue. Based on Royal Society Discussion Meetings, many papers here consider “new perspectives on symbiosis in cell evolution.” In this regard a Russian Doll model is adopted to best express how these bacterial compartments nest within plant and animal cells so as to convert energy for photosynthesis and respiration.

Aon, Miguel, at al. Percolation and Criticality in a Mitochondrial Network. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 101/4447, 2004. Researchers at the Institute of Molecular Cardiobiology at Johns Hopkins University find complex system phenomena to explain the dynamic vitality of heart cells, cited as one more example of its universal instantiation.

We have recently observed that coordinated cell-wide oscillations in the mitochondrial energy state of heart cells can be induced by a highly localized perturbation of a few elements of the mitochondrial network, indicating that mitochondria represent a complex, self-organized system. (4447) The scaling and fractal properties of the mitochondrial network at the edge of instability agree remarkably well with the idea that mitochondria are organized as a percolation matrix, with reactive oxygen species as a key messenger. (4447)

Aon, Miguel, et al. The Scale-Free Dynamics of Eukaryotic Cells. PLoS One. 3/e3624, 2008. In work that would epitomize the systems biology turn and method, life scientists from the US, Canada, Japan, and the UK, find whole biological patterns and processes to be suffused by complexity, network phenomena which display in an invariant iteration.

Temporal organization of biological processes requires massively parallel processing on a synchronized time-base. We analyzed time-series data obtained from the bioenergetic oscillatory outputs of Saccharomyces cerevisiae and isolated cardiomyocytes utilizing Relative Dispersional (RDA) and Power Spectral (PSA) analyses. These analyses revealed broad frequency distributions and evidence for long-term memory in the observed dynamics. Moreover RDA and PSA showed that the bioenergetic dynamics in both systems show fractal scaling over at least 3 orders of magnitude, and that this scaling obeys an inverse power law. Therefore we conclude that in S. cerevisiae and cardiomyocytes the dynamics are scale-free in vivo. We argue that the operation of scale-free bioenergetic dynamics plays a fundamental role to integrate cellular function, while providing a framework for robust, yet flexible, responses to the environment. (Abstract excerpts)

Araujo, Gui, et al. A mechanistic framework for complex microbe-host symbioses. Trends in Microbiology.. September, 2024. Swansea University, Swansea, UK, Theoretical and Experimental Ecology Station, CNRS, France, University of New South Wales, and University of Tasmania contribute to the current, revived admission of nature’s pervasive utility of active mutual reciprocities across every organismic domain in their relative evolutionary environs. But they still need to couch it, so it seems, in an inorganic basis to avoid any sense of a vitalist milieu.

Virtually all multicellular organisms live in symbiotic associations with complex microbial communities, aka the microbiome. Recently, the analyses of numerous microbiomes have revealed an incredible diversity of symbionts. Here we explore and summarise the suite of ecological and evolutionary mechanisms identified as relevant to microbiomes. complexity and diversity. We argue that microbiome assembly is a dynamic product of ecology and evolution at various spatio-temporal scales. We develop a cohesive foundation for the theoretical understanding of the combined effects of ecology and evolution on the assembly of complex symbioses.

Archibald, John. One Plus One Equals One: Symbiosis and the Evolution of Complex Life. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014. A few years after the passing of Lynn Margulis (1938-2011) a Dalhousie University, Nova Scotia, research professor of molecular biology praises in a book-length exposition her lifetime advocacy, against much resistance, of ubiquitous cellular mutualities amongst diverse microbes. Along with some other notices, the story can be told about how pervasive natural symbiotic assemblies actually are, which are now gaining inclusion in revised evolutionary theories.

Barbieri, Marcello. How Did the Eukaryotes Evolve? Biological Theory. Online February, 2017. The University of Ferrera biologist (search) continues his pioneer, innovative conception of evolution and living systems as most distinguished by many organic codes in effect beyond just genomes. For example, prokaryote bacteria are seen to form nucleated cells by way of signal transduction, splicing, tubulin, histone, cytoskeleton, compartment, and sequence codes, which serves to admit a pervasive biosemiotic essence.

Belcaid, Mahdi, et al. Symbiotic Organs Shaped by Distinct Modes of Genome Evolution in Cephalopods. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 116/3030, 2019. A premier twenty-two person team from the University of Hawall, Florida, Connecticut, Washington, MO, Vienna, Lyon, UC Santa Barbara and Berkeley, the Jackson Laboratory for Genomic Medicine, CT and Okinawa Institute of Science and Technology, including Margaret McFall-Ngai and Jamie Foster, provide deep evidence of how prevalent and important symbiotic assemblies are to evolutionary development and physiological anatomy. See also companion papers Squid Genomes in a Bacterial World by Thomas Bosch in PNAS (Online February 2019), Host-Microbe Coevolution by Paul O’brien, et al in mBio (10/1, 2019) and a commentary on this vital work New Squid Genome Shines Light on Symbiotic Evolution by Laura Poppick in Quanta Magazine for February 19, 2019.

Animal–microbe associations are critical drivers of evolutionary innovation, yet the origin of specialized symbiotic organs remains largely unexplored. We analyzed the genome of Euprymna scolopes, a model cephalopod, and observed large-scale genomic reorganizations compared with the ancestral bilaterian genome. We report distinct evolutionary signatures within the two symbiotic organs of E. scolopes, the light organ (LO) and the accessory nidamental gland (ANG). The LO evolved through subfunctionalization of genes expressed in the eye, indicating a deep evolutionary link between these organs. Alternatively, the ANG was enriched in novel, species-specific orphan genes suggesting these two tissues originated via different evolutionary strategies. These analyses represent the first genomic insights into the evolution of multiple symbiotic organs within a single animal host. (Significance)

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