Multicellularity
is often considered a prerequisite for morphological complexity, as
seen in the camera-type eyes found in several groups of animals. A
notable exception exists in single-celled eukaryotes called
dinoflagellates, some of which have an eye-like ‘ocelloid’ consisting of
subcellular analogues to a cornea, lens, iris, and retina1.
These planktonic cells are uncultivated and rarely encountered in
environmental samples, obscuring the function and evolutionary origin of
the ocelloid. Here we show, using a combination of electron microscopy,
tomography, isolated-organelle genomics, and single-cell genomics, that
ocelloids are built from pre-existing organelles, including a
cornea-like layer made of mitochondria and a retinal body made of
anastomosing plastids. We find that the retinal body forms the central
core of a network of peridinin-type plastids, which in dinoflagellates
and their relatives originated through an ancient endosymbiosis with a
red alga2.
As such, the ocelloid is a chimaeric structure, incorporating
organelles with different endosymbiotic histories. The anatomical
complexity of single-celled organisms may be limited by the components
available for differentiation, but the ocelloid shows that pre-existing
organelles can be assembled into a structure so complex that it was
initially mistaken for a multicellular eye3.
Although mitochondria and plastids are acknowledged chiefly for their
metabolic roles, they can also be building blocks for greater structural
complexity.
a, Illustration of Nematodinium showing the basic components of the ocelloid with their putative organellar origins. b, TEM of the ocelloid of Erythropsidinium, including the lens (L) and retinal body (r). c, TEM of the ocelloid of Nematodinium, depicting the edge of the lens (L) where it is overlain by a cornea-like layer of mitochondria (m). d, Genomic reads amplified from five whole cells of Nematodinium; arrow, retinal body. e, Genomic reads amplified from five retinal bodies (arrow) after they were micro-dissected from individual cells of Nematodinium.