It's the first Science Byte of the month - so let's talk about the MSOE August challenge!  This month, endosymbionts was chosen.  Here are some point form fact on what the heck that is:
- Endosymbionts are organisms that live in an endosymbiosis.  Word origins are my favourite way to define a word, so here we go (all from the Greek): endo = within; syn = together; biosis = living.  So endosymbionts are organisms that live inside another organism, creating a mutually beneficial relationship (well, usually - sometimes the endosymbiont is destructive to its host). 
- Some examples? The bacteria that live in your gut (and those of many animals & insects), helping you digest your food. There are some bacteria that perform a similar function for plants too, living inside nodules in the roots.
- So what?  Well, this relationship has helped develop a theory on the evolution of cells.  Called the Endosymbiotic Theory, it states that chloroplasts & mitochondria derived from intra-cellular endosymbionts.  OK, now let me explain that in terms everyone who isn't a biologist will understand.  Small, single-celled organisms, like bacteria (PROkaryotes), are different from the cells inside multi-cellular organisms like us, animals, plants & insects (EUkaryotes).  One of the major differences is that our cells have membrane-bound intracellular organelles.  HUH?  Let's back up a bit.  So all cells have a membrane around them, holding all the stuff inside.  Inside eukaryotic cells though, there are smaller compartments (organelles) that are also bound by a membrane (one that is separate from the cell membrane) - you won't find any of these inside a prokaryotic cell.  But if you look closely at these organelles, some of them (specifically mitochondria in animals & chloroplasts in plants) look a lot like a little prokaryote: it has it's own DNA, proteins & function.  Interestingly, mitochondria & chloroplasts provide energy for eukaryotic cells, just as endosymbionts do for their host! OK, now let me explain that in terms everyone who isn't a biologist will understand.  Small, single-celled organisms, like bacteria (PROkaryotes), are different from the cells inside multi-cellular organisms like us, animals, plants & insects (EUkaryotes).  One of the major differences is that our cells have membrane-bound intracellular organelles.  HUH?  Let's back up a bit.  So all cells have a membrane around them, holding all the stuff inside.  Inside eukaryotic cells though, there are smaller compartments (organelles) that are also bound by a membrane (one that is separate from the cell membrane) - you won't find any of these inside a prokaryotic cell.  But if you look closely at these organelles, some of them (specifically mitochondria in animals & chloroplasts in plants) look a lot like a little prokaryote: it has it's own DNA, proteins & function.  Interestingly, mitochondria & chloroplasts provide energy for eukaryotic cells, just as endosymbionts do for their host!
Wow.  That was a paragraph & a half!  I hope it's clear enough... obviously there's a bit more to it than that, but I think I'll stop now.  Feel free to ask me questions in the comments!
 
Mitochondria have always been my favorite organelle - they quite the "powerhouse!" :P
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