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Hydrogen-Based Metabolism as an Ancestral Trait in Lineages Sibling to the Cyanobacteria
Authors
Yuki Amano
Karthik Anantharaman
+14 more
Jillian F. Banfield
Eric D. Becraft
David Burstein
Cindy J. Castelle
Rose S. Kantor
Paula B. Matheus Carnevali
Matthew R. Olm
Joanne M. Santini
Frederik Schulz
Itai Sharon
Patrick M. Shih
Ramunas Stepanauskas
Brian C. Thomas
Tanja Woyke
Publication date
1 December 2019
Publisher
UNA Scholarly Repository
Abstract
© 2019, The Author(s). The evolution of aerobic respiration was likely linked to the origins of oxygenic Cyanobacteria. Close phylogenetic neighbors to Cyanobacteria, such as Margulisbacteria (RBX-1 and ZB3), Saganbacteria (WOR-1), Melainabacteria and Sericytochromatia, may constrain the metabolic platform in which aerobic respiration arose. Here, we analyze genomic sequences and predict that sediment-associated Margulisbacteria have a fermentation-based metabolism featuring a variety of hydrogenases, a streamlined nitrogenase, and electron bifurcating complexes involved in cycling of reducing equivalents. The genomes of ocean-associated Margulisbacteria encode an electron transport chain that may support aerobic growth. Some Saganbacteria genomes encode various hydrogenases, and others may be able to use O2 under certain conditions via a putative novel type of heme copper O2 reductase. Similarly, Melainabacteria have diverse energy metabolisms and are capable of fermentation and aerobic or anaerobic respiration. The ancestor of all these groups may have been an anaerobe in which fermentation and H2 metabolism were central metabolic features. The ability to use O2 as a terminal electron acceptor must have been subsequently acquired by these lineages
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Last time updated on 26/11/2020