One of the article’s most important ideas is that major transitions often convert independent replicators into dependent parts.
Before the transition, the units can reproduce on their own. Afterward, they can replicate only as components of a larger whole.
This is one of evolution’s great mergers and acquisitions. 🧫
Genes become chromosomes. Bacteria become mitochondria and chloroplasts. Single cells become parts of animals, plants, and fungi. Individual insects become workers in colonies. Individual humans become participants in language-based societies.
The problem: lower-level selfishness
The authors insist that this transformation is not easy. Natural selection acting at the lower level can sabotage the higher-level unit.
Examples:
A gene may cheat Mendelian inheritance through meiotic drive or transposable elements.
An asexual female may have a short-term advantage over sexual reproduction because she does not pay the cost of producing males.
A somatic plant cell could, in principle, improve its own genetic transmission by becoming a flower bud even if this harms the plant.
Worker bees may lay male eggs rather than exclusively help the queen reproduce.
These examples show that “integration” is always vulnerable. A body, colony, genome, or society is a political arrangement among replicators. The parliament can be stormed from within.
Why higher-level units do not collapse immediately
The authors argue that major transitions cannot be explained by their eventual long-term benefits. Eukaryotic chromosomes later allowed larger genomes, but that does not explain why eukaryotic chromosome segregation evolved in the first place. Sex later helped eukaryotes diversify, but it could not have originated because of benefits millions of generations in the future.
Instead, the transitions must be explained by immediate selective advantages to replicators.
This is where the gene-centered perspective enters. Szathmáry and Maynard Smith lean on the tradition of George Williams and Richard Dawkins: selection must be explained in terms of benefits to replicators now, not future glory.
The small-founder trick
A key stabilizing principle is that higher-level organisms often pass through a bottleneck with one or very few genetic founders.
A multicellular animal develops from a single fertilized egg. That means its cells are genetically almost identical. Most eukaryotes inherit organelles from one parent only, making organelles within an individual closely related. Early protocells, the authors suggest, may have worked similarly.
This is powerful because high relatedness reduces internal conflict. If all the cells in a body share the same genes, a cell’s evolutionary interests are largely aligned with the body’s success. Not perfectly, as cancer reminds us, but enough for bodies to function.
When does a group become an organism?
The article discusses the idea of the “superorganism.” A group qualifies when it has functional organization like an organism and when selection can act at the group level.
For group selection to work well, several conditions help:
The number of groups should be large.
Migration between groups should be low.
Each group should have no more than one parental group.
These conditions create differences between groups but similarity within groups. That lets selection act on whole groups rather than being drowned by competition among their parts.
Two forces that lock transitions in place
The article names two processes that help maintain higher-level entities once they evolve.
Contingent irreversibility. A formerly independent entity may lose the ability to live alone. Mitochondria cannot go back to free-living bacterial life because many of their genes have moved to the nucleus. Worker bees cannot simply found independent bee civilizations. Cancer cells may escape body control, but they do not become successful protists.
The irreversibility is “contingent” because the reasons are historically accidental. Evolution closes doors not by design, but by piling furniture in front of them.
Central control. If a selfish mutation arises in one gene, suppressor mutations elsewhere in the genome can evolve to restrain it. Leigh’s “parliament of genes” is not democracy by ballot. It is more like every other locus having an incentive to stop the rogue actor.
The message: major transitions require mechanisms that suppress internal rebellion. Without them, the larger unit dissolves back into squabbling parts.