Our oldest microbial ancestors were way ahead of their time

Enlarge / The Golgi apparatus, shown here in light green, may have been involved in building internal structures in cells.ARTUR PLAWGO / SCIENCE PHOTO LIBRARY

Before Neanderthals and Denisovans, before vaguely humanoid primates, proto-mammals, or fish that crawled out of the ocean to become the first terrestrial animals, our earliest ancestors were microbes.

More complex organisms like ourselves descend from eukaryotes, which have a nuclear membrane around their DNA (as opposed to prokaryotes, which don’t). Eukaryotes were thought to have evolved a few billion years ago, during the late Palaeoproterozoic period, and started diversifying by around 800 million years ago. Their

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