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Nucleomorph

Diagram of a four membraned chloroplast containing a nucleomorph. Such a layout results from secondary endosymbiosis.
Diagram of a four membraned chloroplast containing a nucleomorph. Such a layout results from secondary endosymbiosis.

Nucleomorphs are small, vestigial eukaryotic nuclei found between the inner and outer pairs of membranes in certain plastids. They are thought to be vestiges of red and green algal nuclei that were engulfed by a larger eukaryote. Because the nucleomorph lies between two sets of membranes, nucleomorphs support the endosymbiotic theory and are evidence that the plastids containing them are complex plastids. Having two sets of membranes indicate that the plastid, a prokaryote, was engulfed by a eukaryote, an alga, which was then engulfed by another eukaryote, the host cell, making the plastid an example of secondary endosymbiosis.[1][2]

  1. ^ Archibald, J.M.; Lane, C.E. (2009). "Going, Going, Not Quite Gone: Nucleomorphs as a Case Study in Nuclear Genome Reduction". Journal of Heredity. 100 (5): 582–90. doi:10.1093/jhered/esp055. PMID 19617523.
  2. ^ Reyes-Prieto, Adrian; Weber, Andreas P.M.; Bhattacharya, Debashish (2007). "The Origin and Establishment of the Plastid in Algae and Plants". Annual Review of Genetics. 41 (1): 147–68. doi:10.1146/annurev.genet.41.110306.130134. PMID 17600460. S2CID 8966320.

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