Submitted:
24 February 2026
Posted:
26 February 2026
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Abstract
Keywords:
1. Introduction
2. Two Paradigms of Eukaryogenetic Hypotheses
2.1. Symbiotic Paradigm
2.1.1. Serial Endosymbiotic Theory
2.1.2. Early vs. Late Mitochondria Models
2.1.3. Metabolic Symbiosis Hypothesis
2.1.4. Inside-Out Model
2.1.5. Viral Eukaryogenesis Model
2.2. Non-Symbiotic Paradigm
2.2.1. Autogenous Model
2.2.2. Exomembrane Hypothesis
2.2.3. Eukaryomorpha Hypothesis
2.2.4. Thermotogales Hypothesis
2.2.5. Nuclear Pore Timing Hypothesis
2.2.6. DNA Packing Hypothesis
3. Genomic and Structural Debates on Eukaryogenesis
3.1. The Phagocytosis Paradox: Limits of the Endosymbiotic Narrative
3.2. Genomic Mosaics and the Limits of Phylogeny
3.3. Genome Expansion and the Need for Ordering
3.4. The Solution: Hierarchical DNA Packing
3.5. Segregation: From Membrane Anchors to Mitotic Spindles
3.6. Not a Single Event but Multiple Steps
- Genome Expansion: Replication errors and fusion events increased DNA length beyond the organizational limits of prokaryotic architectures.
- Structural Accommodation: To manage this length, the cell evolved histones and chromatin folding.
- Compartmentalization: A nuclear membrane formed to protect and organize this complex genome, thereby establishing the nucleus.
- Mechanical Innovation: The cytoskeleton and mitotic spindle evolved to manage the increased cellular volume and ensure precise chromosome segregation.
4. Integration of Eukaryogenetic Theories
5. Perspectives
Acknowledgments
Declaration of Interests
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