Non-cellular life is life that exists without a cellular structure. This term presumes the phylogenetic scientific classification of viruses as lifeforms.[1]
Hypothesized artificial life, self-replicating machines, and most simple molecules capable of self-replication, such as crystals, are not usually considered living. (See definition of life.)
Some biologists refer to wholly syncytial organisms as "acellular" because their bodies contain multiple nuclei which are not separated by cell walls, however, these cell-bound organisms are outside the scope of the present article.
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Viral self-assembly has implications for the study of the origin of life,[2] as it lends further credence to the hypothesis that life could have started as self-assembling organic molecules.[3][4]
The issue of life without cellular structure came again to the fore with the 2003 discovery that the large and complex Mimivirus can make some proteins that are involved in the synthesis of proteins.[5] This discovery suggests the possibility that some viruses may have evolved from earlier forms that could produce proteins independent of a host cell.[6] If so, there may at one time have been a viral domain of life. It is not clear that all small viruses have originated from more complex viruses by means of genome size reduction. A viral domain of life may only be relevant to certain large viruses such as nucleocytoplasmic large DNA viruses like the Mimivirus.[7]
In discussing the taxonomic domains of life, the terms Acytota or Aphanobionta are occasionally used as the name of a viral kingdom, domain, or empire. The corresponding cellular life name would be Cytota. Non-cellular organisms and cellular life would be the only two subdivisions of earthly life—also known as terrestrial organisms, Biota, Naturae, or Vitae.
Viroids are plant pathogens that consist of a short stretch of circular, single-stranded RNA without the protein coat that is typical for viruses. Viroid RNA does not code for proteins.[8]