New Study Reveals Eukaryotes' Complex Multi-Source Origins, Challenging Single-Endosymbiosis Theory

June 14, 2026
New Study Reveals Eukaryotes' Complex Multi-Source Origins, Challenging Single-Endosymbiosis Theory
  • The origin of eukaryotes was not a single two-way event but a mosaic process, with mitochondria tracing back to alphaproteobacterial lineage and substantial gene input from Planctomycetota, Myxococcota, and other microbes shaping early eukaryotes.

  • The eukaryotic genome shows diverse sources, including Asgard archaea, Alphaproteobacteria, Planctomycetota, Myxococcota, and giant viruses, indicating a multi-source origin.

  • Planctomycetota likely contributed earlier than traditionally thought, with Myxococcota and the mitochondrial lineage contributing later in overlapping waves; additional minor donors included Chloroflexota and Gammaproteobacteria.

  • The research relied on over several years of computational work on MareNostrum supercomputers and large genomic databases, underscoring the robustness of detected evolutionary signals.

  • Led by Dr. Toni Gabaldón, the study used computational molecular archaeology on public genomes to reconstruct LECA and uncover diverse microbial evolutionary signals.

  • LECA appears highly chimeric, with broad but patchy acquisitions across metabolism and cellular processes, and expansions in signal transduction repertoires linked to trophic diversity, signaling extensive post-LECA diversification.

  • Findings support a model where early eukaryotes inhabited mixed microbial ecosystems, such as microbial mats, enabling gradual gene exchange and acquisition of new capabilities.

  • Using a reduced orthologous gene set across diverse eukaryotes, the study estimates LECA lived in an oxygen-rich environment, acquired energy by predation or scavenging, and possessed hallmark eukaryotic structures, though it lacked a full suite of cell-division regulatory genes.

  • broader reconstruction of LECA across diverse life forms suggests a complex ancestral cell with modern-like transport systems and an oxygenated habitat, shaped by extensive gene exchange.

  • These results imply that life’s origin involved long-term genetic exchanges among varied microbes, prompting revisions to the textbook view of a single endosymbiotic event driving eukaryogenesis.

  • Metabolic clues from donor clades point to aerobic respiration in the mitochondrial ancestor, with variable signals for other metabolisms such as fermentative trends in Asgard-like ancestors, potential photosynthetic elements, and sulfate reduction signals.

  • Viruses (Nucleocytoviricota) account for about 4.5% of LECA-OG phylogenies, indicating substantial viral mediation in shaping the LECA proteome.

Summary based on 4 sources


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