Ministeria vibrans Forms 60-Day Aggregates, Linking Animal Multicellularity Genes to Early Origins
Updated
Updated · Nature.com · Jun 9
Ministeria vibrans Forms 60-Day Aggregates, Linking Animal Multicellularity Genes to Early Origins
3 articles · Updated · Nature.com · Jun 9
Summary
Nature researchers found the unicellular filasterean Ministeria vibrans forms homogeneous aggregates with reproducible kinetics and long-term stability, adding a new close animal relative to the list of species that can aggregate.
60-day observations and gene-expression analyses showed the cells deploy homologs of animal genes tied to adhesion, signaling and transcriptional regulation during aggregation.
Feeding and mating appear to drive the behavior, suggesting aggregation offered immediate fitness benefits before similar genetic machinery was co-opted for animal multicellular development.
The findings challenge the long-standing view that aggregation was marginal to animal origins and instead point to aggregative multicellularity as a key step in building the animal genetic toolkit.
What evolutionary spark ignited complex animals if their genetic toolkit existed in single-celled ancestors?
Could changing ocean ecology alone have forced our single-celled ancestors into becoming multicellular?
Ministeria vibrans Forms Stable Multicellular Aggregates for Over 60 Days: New Insights into Animal Multicellularity Evolution
Overview
A groundbreaking study published in Nature on June 9, 2026, reveals that Ministeria vibrans, a close unicellular relative of animals, can form large, stable, and homogeneous multicellular aggregates when co-cultured with the bacterium Thalassospira lucentensis. These aggregates persist for over 60 days, challenging the long-held belief that aggregation was not a viable or stable pathway to complex multicellularity in animals. This discovery opens a new chapter in evolutionary biology by suggesting that stable aggregation could have played a fundamental role in the early evolution of animal multicellularity.