Proterozoic Acquisition of Archaeal Genes for Extracellular Electron Transfer: A Metabolic Adaptation of Aerobic Ammonia-Oxidizing Bacteria to Oxygen Limitation

Author:

Gulay Arda12ORCID,Fournier Greg3ORCID,Smets Barth F2,Girguis Peter R1

Affiliation:

1. Department of Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Harvard University , Cambridge, MA , USA

2. Department of Environmental and Resource Engineering, Technical University of Denmark , Lyngby , Denmark

3. Department of Earth, Atmospheric and Planetary Sciences, Massachusetts Institute of Technology , Cambridge, MA , USA

Abstract

AbstractMany aerobic microbes can utilize alternative electron acceptors under oxygen-limited conditions. In some cases, this is mediated by extracellular electron transfer (or EET), wherein electrons are transferred to extracellular oxidants such as iron oxide and manganese oxide minerals. Here, we show that an ammonia-oxidizer previously known to be strictly aerobic, Nitrosomonas communis, may have been able to utilize a poised electrode to maintain metabolic activity in anoxic conditions. The presence and activity of multiheme cytochromes in N. communis further suggest a capacity for EET. Molecular clock analysis shows that the ancestors of β-proteobacterial ammonia oxidizers appeared after Earth's atmospheric oxygenation when the oxygen levels were >10−4pO2 (present atmospheric level [PAL]), consistent with aerobic origins. Equally important, phylogenetic reconciliations of gene and species trees show that the multiheme c-type EET proteins in Nitrosomonas and Nitrosospira lineages were likely acquired by gene transfer from γ-proteobacteria when the oxygen levels were between 0.1 and 1 pO2 (PAL). These results suggest that β-proteobacterial EET evolved during the Proterozoic when oxygen limitation was widespread, but oxidized minerals were abundant.

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Genetics,Molecular Biology,Ecology, Evolution, Behavior and Systematics

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