The DNA replication enzymes are unable to copy to the end of a linear chromosome. A portion of DNA is lost from the end of the chromosome after each replication. Because of this, eukaryotes have telomeres at the ends their chromosomes.
In most cells of a multi-cellular organism, the telomere is slowly reduced in size after each replication, leading to apoptosis. Cells that need to reproduce indefinitely such as germ and stem cells have to employ special mechanisms to replenish the telomere.
For multi-cellular eukaryotes I can see how this might be useful (for instance as a mechanism to counter cancer). However, I cannot see a purpose for apoptosis in the unicellular eukaryotes from which multi-cellular organisms evolved. Yet unicellular eukaryotes (e.g. yeast) have linear chromosomes with telomere caps. This problem does not exist in the circular chromosomes of unicellular prokaryotes from which unicellular eukaryotes are assumed to have evolved.
What advantage did linear chromosomes provide single-cell eukaryotes to offset the extra investment in reparing the telomere?