Soapy Sam said:
There's nothing magical about this.
I think what's pretty cool about it, though, is that it can help you get your head around the concept of "diverging lines" in ancestries. For instance, there are certain genes that we have now that will be nearly ubiquitous and will, for whatever specific reasons, survive into what will become our far-in-the-future genetic progeny. These may be selected by such things as a unique advantage in a particular disease (such as the few lucky people who seem to be able to bathe in HIV virus and never contract it). That line will eventually be traceable backwards to a common ancestor. The question is how far back can this be traced until we can find the one prototype that first produced or carried that genetic material.
There are already proteins, called "ubiquitins" (originally enough

), that we possess as a fairly common intracellular protein. They serve various functions such as cell architecture and structural support, transport and degradation of other proteins, intracellular buffering, just to name a few. These genes are prevalent all throughout nature, and in many cases there is very little difference between those proteins we have in our cells compared to those in a dog's cell to those in a chicken's cell to even those in a fungal cell. Sometimes there's no difference.
So, while it's a neat detective story to pick-out DNA in a mitochondria and trace it back to a single "Eve", I think it's equally interesting to look at the basic components of life - using the entire mitochondria itself, as an example - to show a much longer conjoined history with all species, and as living proof of evolution as a fact, not a theory.
It's very fascinating, at least to me.
-TT