RT Journal Article SR Electronic T1 Sporulation, bacterial cell envelopes, and the origin of life JF bioRxiv FD Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory SP 041624 DO 10.1101/041624 A1 Elitza I. Tocheva A1 Davi R. Ortega A1 Grant J. Jensen YR 2016 UL http://biorxiv.org/content/early/2016/02/29/041624.abstract AB Four recent papers from our group exploiting the power of electron cryotomography to produce 3-D reconstructions of intact cells in a near-native state have led to the proposal that an ancient sporulation-like event gave rise to the second membrane in diderm bacteria. Here we review the images of sporulating monoderm and diderm cells which show how sporulation leads to diderm cells. We also review the images of Gram-negative and Gram-positive cell walls that show they are more closely related than previously thought, and explain how this provides critical support for the hypothesis. Mapping the distribution of cell envelope architectures onto the most recent phylogenetic tree of life then leads to the conclusion that the diderm cell plan, and therefore the sporulation-like event that gave rise to it, must be very ancient. One explanation for the biogeologic record is that during the cataclysmic transitions of early Earth, cellular evolution may have gone through a bottleneck where only spores survived (LUCA was a spore).