Topic

Cell Biology

2 facts

  • Biology38 views

    Mitochondria Were Once Free-Living Bacteria That Were Absorbed by Cells

    The endosymbiotic theory, confirmed by Lynn Margulis in the 1960s and now universally accepted, holds that mitochondria — the powerhouses of eukaryotic cells — were once independent alpha-proteobacteria that were engulfed by an ancestral cell roughly 1.5 billion years ago. Instead of being digested, they formed a mutually beneficial partnership. Evidence: mitochondria have their own circular DNA, divide by binary fission, and have double membranes — all hallmarks of bacterial ancestry.

  • Even101 views

    Most Eukaryotic Species Have an Even Number of Chromosomes.

    Chromosomes exist in homologous pairs in diploid organisms, meaning the total count is typically an even number. Humans, for example, have 46 chromosomes (23 pairs).