Nitroplast: Difference between revisions
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| organelle = | | organelle = Nitroplast | ||
| icon = NitrogenFixingPlastidIcon.png | | icon = NitrogenFixingPlastidIcon.png | ||
| image = NitroplastOrganelle.png | | image = NitroplastOrganelle.png |
Revision as of 15:14, 9 November 2024
Performs Anaerobic Nitrogen Fixation to produce Ammonia from gaseous Nitrogen and ATP , producing one of the components of growth for cellular reproduction. More efficient than the prokaryotic Nitrogenase.
Requirements
A cell must have a Nucleus to evolve Nitroplasts.
Processes
Aerobic Nitrogen Fixation
Fixes atmospheric Nitrogen into Ammonia by expending energy. Rate scales with the amount of environmental Nitrogen and Oxygen . More efficient than the equivalent process in Nitrogenase.
Modifications
No modifications.
Effects
No effects.
Upgrades
No upgrades.
Strategy
We recommend replacing Nitrogenase with Nitrogen-Fixing Plastids when your cell develops a Nucleus, as the latter can more efficiently generate resources needed for reproduction.
As with Nitrogenase, Nitrogen-Fixing Plastids are a sensible choice if you have ATP to spare. Creating reproduction resources yourself removes a limiting factor on your ability to progress through generations more quickly.
Scientific Background
Nitroplasts have been shown to have evolved from endosymbionts in eukaryotic cells.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nitroplast https://www.science.org/doi/10.1126/science.ado8571