Apoptotic bodies in phytoplankton suggest evolutionary conservation of cell death mechanisms. Corredor, L., Vergou, G. A., Skalický, V., Antoniadi, I., Wheaton, B. J., Ljung, K., Gorzsás, A., & Funk, C. Nature Communications, 16(1):8427, September, 2025. Publisher: Nature Publishing Group
Apoptotic bodies in phytoplankton suggest evolutionary conservation of cell death mechanisms [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
Programmed Cell Death (PCD) in eukaryotes is a regulated process occurring during development, cell differentiation and aging. Apoptosis is a particularly well studied morphotype of PCD, only observed in animal cells (metazoan). Its most definitive hallmark is the formation and release of membrane-enclosed extracellular vesicles called Apoptotic Bodies (ABs). Although apoptotic-like features have been described in plants, yeast, protozoa and phytoplankton, the production of ABs has been thought to be limited to multicellular animals. Here we report the production and release of extracellular ABs in a non-metazoan unicellular eukaryote, the cryptophyte alga Guillardia theta. Morphologies of G. theta cells during aging and pharmacologically-induced cell death confirm the presence of ABs and apoptosis in phytoplankton. G. theta ABs have similar composition to metazoan ABs, carrying DNA, proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, fragments of organelles and cytosol portions. Our results demonstrate that G. theta, a microalga that arose from secondary endosymbiosis, experiences apoptotic cell death in physiological conditions, similar to animal cells. Since secondary endosymbiosis occurred prior to the origin of multicellularity, our discovery questions the evolutionary origin of PCD.
@article{corredor_apoptotic_2025,
	title = {Apoptotic bodies in phytoplankton suggest evolutionary conservation of cell death mechanisms},
	volume = {16},
	copyright = {2025 The Author(s)},
	issn = {2041-1723},
	url = {https://www.nature.com/articles/s41467-025-63956-4},
	doi = {10.1038/s41467-025-63956-4},
	abstract = {Programmed Cell Death (PCD) in eukaryotes is a regulated process occurring during development, cell differentiation and aging. Apoptosis is a particularly well studied morphotype of PCD, only observed in animal cells (metazoan). Its most definitive hallmark is the formation and release of membrane-enclosed extracellular vesicles called Apoptotic Bodies (ABs). Although apoptotic-like features have been described in plants, yeast, protozoa and phytoplankton, the production of ABs has been thought to be limited to multicellular animals. Here we report the production and release of extracellular ABs in a non-metazoan unicellular eukaryote, the cryptophyte alga Guillardia theta. Morphologies of G. theta cells during aging and pharmacologically-induced cell death confirm the presence of ABs and apoptosis in phytoplankton. G. theta ABs have similar composition to metazoan ABs, carrying DNA, proteins, lipids, carbohydrates, fragments of organelles and cytosol portions. Our results demonstrate that G. theta, a microalga that arose from secondary endosymbiosis, experiences apoptotic cell death in physiological conditions, similar to animal cells. Since secondary endosymbiosis occurred prior to the origin of multicellularity, our discovery questions the evolutionary origin of PCD.},
	language = {en},
	number = {1},
	urldate = {2025-10-03},
	journal = {Nature Communications},
	author = {Corredor, Luisa and Vergou, Georgia Antonia and Skalický, Vladimír and Antoniadi, Ioanna and Wheaton, Benjamin J. and Ljung, Karin and Gorzsás, András and Funk, Christiane},
	month = sep,
	year = {2025},
	note = {Publisher: Nature Publishing Group},
	keywords = {Apoptosis, Cellular microbiology, Plant cell death},
	pages = {8427},
}

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