research article review journal article
A diverse Paleoproterozoic microbial ecosystem implies early eukaryogenesis
- Publication date
- 1 January 2025
- Publisher
- The Royal Society
Abstract
peer reviewedMicrobial interactions may lead to major events in life and planetary
evolution, such as eukaryogenesis, the birth of complex nucleated cells.
In synergy with microbiology, cellular palaeobiology may shed some light
on this very ancient and debated affair and its circumstances. The 1.78–
1.73 Ga McDermott Formation, McArthur Basin (Australia), preserves a
microfossil assemblage that provides unique insights into the evolution
of early eukaryotes. The fossil cells display a level of morphological
complexity, disparity and plasticity requiring a complex cytoskeleton and
an endomembrane system, pushing back the minimum age of uncontested
eukaryotic fossils by more than 100 million years (Ma). They also document
an earlier appearance of reproduction by budding, simple multicellularity
and diverse programmed openings of cyst wall implying a life cycle,
as well as possible evidence for microbial symbiosis and behaviour,
including eukaryovory and ectosymbiosis. This microbial community that
also includes cyanobacterial cells preserving thylakoids, microbial mats and
other microfossils, thrived in supratidal to intertidal marine environments
with heterogeneous but mostly suboxic to anoxic redox conditions.
Taken together, these observations imply early eukaryogenesis, including
mitochondrial endosymbiosis in micro-/nano-oxic niches, and suggest a
>1.75 Ga minimum age for the Last Eukaryotic Common Ancestor (LECA),
preceded by a deeper history of the domain Eukarya, consistent with
several molecular clocks and the fossil record.
This article is part of the discussion meeting issue ‘Chance and purpose
in the evolution of biospheres’