10.9k views
3 votes
There is compelling evidence that today’s mitochondria and chloroplasts were once primitive bacterial cells. This evidence is described in the endosymbiotic theory. Symbiosis occurs when two different species benefit from living and working together. When one organism actually lives inside the other it's called endosymbiosis. In the 1960's, a number of scientists had proposed that eukaryotic cells evolved when one bacterium (a prokaryote) engulfed another and the two began living together. Over many generations, and through many smaller changes, the engulfed cell evolved into an organelle, like the mitochondrion. According to this idea, mitochondria look and act so much like bacteria because they once were bacteria. All but one statement below is further evidence in support of the endosymbiosis theory. That is A) Nuclear DNA is bundled up in linear strands. B) Mitochondria have their own circular DNA genome. C) Bacterial DNA is capable of directing protein synthesis and enzyme production. D) Mitochondria are more closely related to bacterial cells than the eukaryotic cells in which they reside.

User Crifan
by
5.2k points

2 Answers

7 votes

Answer:

A) Nuclear DNA is bundled up in linear strands.

Step-by-step explanation:

Based on the knowledge that circular DNA was the first kind of DNA that existed, some scientists thought that bacterial DNA and mitochondrial DNA had both evolved from this early circular DNA, but along separate paths. In other words, they thought that bacterial DNA and mitochondrial DNA were similarly shaped, not because they were closely related, but because neither had ever evolved away from DNA’s original shape.

User Betelgeuce
by
5.7k points
7 votes

A) Nuclear DNA is bundled up in linear strands - has nothing to do with the endosymbiosis theory.

User John Kattenhorn
by
5.4k points