Last universal ancestor
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Last universal ancestor
A cladogram linking all major groups of living organisms to the LUA (the black trunk at the bottom). This graph is derived from ribosomal RNA sequence data. A cladogram linking all major groups of living organisms to the LUA (short trunk at the center). This graph is derived from complete genome sequencing data. The last universal ancestor (LUA), also called the last universal common ancestor (LUCA) or the cenancestor, is the hypothetical latest living organism from which all organisms now living on Earth descend. Thus it is the most recent common ancestor of all current life on Earth. It is estimated to have lived some 3.6 to 4.1 billion years ago (sometime between the Basin Groups and Paleoarchean eras)[1] .
FeaturesBased on the properties shared by all independently living organisms on Earth,[2] [3] it is possible to derive the features that the LUA must have had before branched out:
MisconceptionsThe LUA is not hypothesised as being:
HypothesesWhen LUA was hypothesized, cladograms based on genetic distance between living cells indicated that Archaea split early from the rest of life. This was inferred from the fact that all known archaeans were highly resistant to environmental extremes such as high salinity, temperature or acidity, and led some scientists to suggest that LUA evolved in areas like the deep ocean vents, where such extremes prevail today. But archaeans were discovered in less hostile environments and are now believed by many taxonomists to be more closely related to eukaryotes than bacteria, though this is still somewhat contentious. It is possible that all of LUA's contemporaries became extinct and only LUA's genetic heritage lived to this day. Or, as proposed by Carl Woese, perhaps no individual organism can be considered a LUA, but the genetic heritage of all modern organisms derived through horizontal gene transfer among an ancient community of organisms.[4] Another hypothesis to explain the paucity of alternative life forms is panspermia, the inoculation of Earth by life carried on meteorites. See also
References
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