Abstract
In the half century since the formulation of the prokaryote : eukaryote dichotomy,
many authors have proposed that the former evolved from something
resembling the latter, in defiance of common (and possibly common sense)
views. In such ‘eukaryotes first’ (EF) scenarios, the last universal common
ancestor is imagined to have possessed significantly many of the complex
characteristics of contemporary eukaryotes, as relics of an earlier ‘progenotic’
period or RNAworld. Bacteria and Archaea thus must have lost these complex
features secondarily, through ‘streamlining’. If the canonical three-domain tree
in which Archaea and Eukarya are sisters is accepted, EF entails that Bacteria
and Archaea are convergently prokaryotic.We ask what this means and how it
might be tested.