The Glaucophyta include those algae that have endosymbiotic cyanobacteria in the cytoplasm instead of chloroplasts. Because of the nature of their symbiotic association, they are thought to represent intermediates in the evolution of the chloroplast. The endosymbiotic theory of chloroplast evolution, first proposed by Mereschkowsky in 1905, is the one most widely accepted. According to this theory, a cyanobacterium was taken up by a phagocytic organism into a food vesicle. Normally the cyanobacterium would be digested by the flagellate, but by chance a mutation occurred, with the flagellate being unable to digest the cyanobacterium. This was probably a beneficial mutation because the cyanobacterium, by virtue of its lack of feedback inhibition, secreted considerable amounts of metabolites to the host flagellate. The flagellate in turn gave the cyanobacterium a protected environment, and the composite organism was probably able to live in an ecological niche where there were no photosynthetic organisms (i.e., a slightly acid body of water where free-living cyanobacteria do not grow; see Chapter 2). Pascher (1914) coined terms for this association; he called the endosymbiotic cyanobacteria cyanelles; the host, a cyanome; and the association between the two, a syncyanosis. In the original syncyanosis the cyanelle had a wall around it. Because the wall slowed the transfer of compounds from the cyanelle to the host and vice versa, any mutation that resulted in a loss of wall would have been beneficial and selected for in evolution.
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