One plus one equals one : symbiosis and the evolution of complex life / John Archibald.
By: Archibald, John M [author.].
Edition: First Edition.Description: xiii, 205 pages : illustrations ; 23 cm.ISBN: 019966059X (hardcover); 9780199660599 (hardcover).Subject(s): Evolution (Biology) | Molecular biology | Symbiosis | Evolution (Biology) | Molecular biology | Symbiosis | Symbiosis | Biological EvolutionGenre/Form: Print books.DDC classification: 572.8Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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On Shelf | QH378 .A73 2014 (Browse shelf) | Available | AU0000000003296 |
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QH367.5 .Q36 2019 The tangled tree : a radical new history of life / | QH375 .H35 2020 From Darwin to Derrida : selfish genes, social selves, and the meanings of life / | QH375 .W327 2014 Arrival of the fittest : solving evolution's greatest puzzle / | QH378 .A73 2014 One plus one equals one : symbiosis and the evolution of complex life / | QH390 .J390 2021 The gene's eye view of evolution / | QH398 .E43 2015 Eternal ephemera : adaptation and the Origin of species, from the nineteenth century, through punctuated equilibria and beyond / | QH430 .G458 2018 Genetics : from genes to genomes / |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Life as we don't know it -- Revolutions in biology -- The seeds of symbiosis -- Molecular rulers of life's kingdoms -- Bacteria become organelles: an insider's take -- The complex cell: when, who, where, and how? -- Green evolution, green revolution -- Back to the future -- Epilogue.
It is natural to look at biotechnology in the 21st century with a mix of wonder and fear. But biotechnology is not as 'unnatural' as one might think. All living organisms use the same molecular processes to replicate their genetic material and the same basic code to 'read' their genes. The similarities can be seen in their DNA. Here, John Archibald shows how evolution has been 'plugging-and-playing' with the subcellular components of life from the very beginning and continues to do so today. For evidence, we need look no further than the inner workings of our own cells. Molecular biology has allowed us to gaze back more than three billion years, revealing the microbial mergers and acquisitions that underpin the development of complex life. One Plus One Equals One tells the story of how we have come to this realization and its implications. --