The endosymbiotic theory states that some of the organelles in present eukaryotic cells were once prokaryotic microbes. in this theory, the first eukaryotic cell was probably an amoeba like cell which got nutrients by phagocytosis and contained a nucleus which formed when a piece of the cytoplasmic membrane pinched off around the chromosomes. some of those amoeba like organisms ingested prokaryotic cells and survived within the organism hence developed a symbiotic relationship. mitochondria formed when bacteria capable of aerobic respiration were ingested; chloroplasts formed when photosynthetic bacteria were ingested. they eventually lost their cell wall and much of their DNA because they were not of benefit within the host cell. mitochondria and chloroplast cannot grow outside their host cells.
Evidence of this is based on the following:
The endosymbiotic theory that mitochondria and chloroplasts in eukaryotic cells today were once separate prokaryotic microbes holds the basis for the theory.
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