
Major Transitions in Evolution
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Content
- Cover
- Contents
- List of tables
- Preface
- 1 Introduction
- 1.1 Preamble
- 1.2 The fallacy of progress
- 1.3 The measurement of complexity
- 1.4 The major transitions
- 1.5 Duplication, symbiosis and epigenesis
- 1.6 Some other features of the major transitions
- 2 What is life?
- 2.1 The definition of life
- 2.2 The Oklo reactor
- 2.3 The chemoton
- 3 Chemical evolution
- 3.1 Introduction
- 3.2 Experiments: the primitive soup
- 3.3 The hypothesis of surface metabolism: the primitive pizza
- 3.4 A logical basis for autocatalysis
- 3.5 Is chemical 'evolution' evolution?
- 3.6 Evolution of metabolic networks through chemical symbiosis
- 3.7 Chemical evolution in clouds, and the extraterrestrial contribution
- 3.8 Conclusions
- 4 The evolution of templates
- 4.1 Introduction
- 4.2 Replication and nucleation
- 4.3 The accuracy of replication and the error threshold
- 4.4 The ecology and coexistence of RNA molecules
- 4.5 The hypercycle
- 4.6 The stochastic corrector model
- 4.7 Conclusions
- 5 The chicken and egg problem
- 5.1 Introduction
- 5.2 RNA as an enzyme
- 5.3 Autocatalytic protein nets
- 5.4 The urgene: RNA, clay or something else?
- 5.5 What determines the size of the genetic alphabet?
- 6 The origin of translation and the genetic code
- 6.1 Modifications of the code
- 6.2 The origin of the code I: the top-down approach
- 6.3 The origin of the code II: the bottom-up approach
- 7 The origin of protocells
- 7.1 The need for active compartmentation
- 7.2 The origin of membranogenic molecules and membranes
- 7.3 Spontaneous cell division
- 7.4 The problem of membrane transport
- 7.5 Primordial ancestry of autotrophy
- 7.6 Metabolism in ribo-organisms: the iron-sulphur world meets the RNA world
- 7.7 The evolution of specific enzymes
- 7.8 The origin of the two negibacterial membranes
- 7.9 The origin of chromosomes
- 8 The origin of eukaryotes
- 8.1 The problem
- 8.2 A possible scenario
- 8.3 The origin of intracellular membranes
- 8.4 The origin of mitosis
- 8.5 The nucleus, genome organization and the origin of introns
- 8.6 The origin of mitochondria, chloroplasts and microbodies
- 8.7 The origin of centrioles and undulipodia
- 8.8 Timing
- 9 The origin of sex and the nature of species
- 9.1 Introduction
- 9.2 Cellular mechanisms of the haploid-diploid cycle
- 9.3 Ancient haploid-diploid cycles
- 9.4 Mating types and the origin of anisogamy
- 9.5 Sex and the nature of species
- 10 Intragenomic conflict
- 10.1 Introduction
- 10.2 A fair meiosis
- 10.3 Intrachromosomal repetitive DNA
- 10.4 Avoiding conflict between organelles
- 10.5 Distortion of sex allocation
- 11 Symbiosis
- 11.1 Introduction
- 11.2 The ecology of symbiosis
- 11.3 A model
- 11.4 Modes of transmission
- 11.5 Irreversibility
- 11.6 Does symbiosis evolve towards mutualism?
- 11.7 Evolution within a host
- 11.8 Symbiosis, variability and sex
- 12 Development in simple organisms
- 12.1 The origins of development
- 12.2 The limits of self-assembly
- 12.3 The organization of gene action in time: the cell cycle
- 12.4 The 'development' of a unicellular organism: budding yeast
- 12.5 The division of labour in the origin of multicellular eukaryotes: Volvox
- 12.6 Multicellularity through aggregation: myxobacteria and slime moulds
- 12.7 Two mechanisms of cell differentiation
- 13 Gene regulation and cell heredity
- 13.1 Gene regulation
- 13.2 Cell heredity
- 13.3 What had to be invented?
- 14 The development of spatial patterns
- 14.1 Flower development as an example of morphogenesis
- 14.2 Positional information: external specification or self-organization?
- 14.3 Positional information in Drosophila and the chick
- 14.4 Segmentation as an example of further elaboration
- 14.5 From Cartesian to polar coordinates: the generation of proximodistal structures
- 15 Development and evolution
- 15.1 Introduction
- 15.2 Development and the levels of selection
- 15.3 Cell heredity and the inheritance of acquired characters
- 15.4 Gene homology in development
- 15.5 The zootype and the definition of animals
- 16 The origins of societies
- 16.1 Introduction
- 16.2 The evolution of cooperation
- 16.3 Kinds of animal society
- 16.4 The genetics of insect sociality
- 16.5 The division of labour in animal societies
- 16.6 Factors predisposing insects to sociality
- 16.7 The origins of human society
- 17 The origin of language
- 17.1 Introduction
- 17.2 Language and representation
- 17.3 Some features of syntax
- 17.4 Language acquisition
- 17.5 Natural selection for language
- 17.6 Tool use and language: hierarchically organized sequential behaviour
- 17.7 Brain damage and language disorders
- 17.8 The genetics of language disorders
- 17.9 Protolanguage
- 17.10 From protolanguage to language
- 17.11 Conclusions
- References
- Author index
- A
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- D
- E
- F
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- I
- J
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- Y
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- Subject index
- A
- B
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