FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 23 , Pages 3738-3745, 3 December 2009

Evolution and diversity of the Golgi body

Edited by Daniela Corda

  • Kevin Mowbrey
  • ,
  • Joel B. Dacks

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Address: 6-30 MSB, Department of Cell Biology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada T6G 2H7. Fax: +1 780 492 0450.

Department of Cell Biology, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada T6G 2H7

Received 20 August 2009; accepted 11 October 2009. published online 16 October 2009.

Abstract 

Often considered a defining eukaryotic feature, the Golgi body is one of the most recognizable and functionally integrated cellular organelles. It is therefore surprising that some unicellular eukaryotes do not, at first glance, appear to possess Golgi stacks. Here we review the molecular evolutionary, genomic and cell biological evidence for Golgi bodies in these organisms, with the organelle likely present in some form in all cases. This, along with the overwhelming prevalence of stacked cisternae in most eukaryotes, implies that the ancestral eukaryote possessed a stacked Golgi body, with at least eight independent instances of Golgi unstacking in our cellular history.

Abbreviations: CWP, cyst wall protein, DHFR–TS, Dihydrofolate reductase and Thymidilate synthase, ESV, encystation-specific vesicle, GRASP, Golgi reassembly stacking protein, SAR, Stramenopile, Alveolate and Rhizaria

Keywords: Protist, Phylogeny, Parasite, Archezoa

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PII: S0014-5793(09)00801-1

doi:10.1016/j.febslet.2009.10.025

FEBS Letters
Volume 583, Issue 23 , Pages 3738-3745, 3 December 2009