Organism size promotes the evolution of specialized cells in multicellular digital organisms

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Abstract

Specialized cells are the essence of complex multicellular life. Fossils allow us to study the modification of specialized, multicellular features such as jaws, scales, and muscular appendages. But it is still unclear what organismal properties contributed to the transition from undifferentiated organisms, which contain only a single cell type, to multicellular organisms with specialized cells. Using digital organisms I studied this transition. My simulations show that the transition to specialized cells happens faster in organism composed of many cells than in organisms composed of few cells. Large organisms suffer less from temporarily unsuccessful evolutionary experiments with individual cells, allowing them to evolve specialized cells via evolutionary trajectories that are unavailable to smaller organisms. This demonstrates that the evolution of simple multicellular organisms which are composed of many functionally identical cells accelerates the evolution of more complex organisms with specialized cells. © 2007 The Author.

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Willensdorfer, M. (2008). Organism size promotes the evolution of specialized cells in multicellular digital organisms. Journal of Evolutionary Biology, 21(1), 104–110. https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1420-9101.2007.01466.x

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