4.8 Article

A novel thylakoid-less isolate fills a billion-year gap in the evolution of Cyanobacteria

Journal

CURRENT BIOLOGY
Volume 31, Issue 13, Pages 2857-+

Publisher

CELL PRESS
DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2021.04.042

Keywords

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Funding

  1. National Science Foundation (NSF) [DEB1831428]
  2. Ministry of Science and Technology (Taiwan) Young Scholar Fellowship Einstein Program [108C5368, 109C5369]
  3. Ministry of Education Yushan Young Scholar Program [108V1102, 109V1102]
  4. Chaires de recherche du Canada [950-232698]
  5. CRNSG [RGPIN-2016-05967]
  6. Earl S. Tupper Fellowship (STRI)

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The newly discovered Gloeobacteria member, Anthocerotibacter panamensis, possesses a unique combination of traits and occupies a key position in the evolutionary tree of cyanobacteria. It is capable of oxygenic photosynthesis, providing a new perspective for studying the origin of oxygenic photosynthesis.
Cyanobacteria have played pivotal roles in Earth's geological history, especially during the rise of atmospheric oxygen. However, our ability to infer the early transitions in Cyanobacteria evolution has been limited by their extremely lopsided tree of life-the vast majority of extant diversity belongs to Phycobacteria (or crown Cyanobacteria), while its sister lineage, Gloeobacteria, is depauperate and contains only two closely related species of Gloeobacter and a metagenome-assembled genome. Here, we describe a new cultured member of Gloeobacteria, Anthocerotibacter panamensis, isolated from a tropical hornwort. Anthocerotibacter diverged from Gloeobacter over 1.4 Ga ago and has low 16S rDNA identities with environmental samples. Our ultrastructural, physiological, and genomic analyses revealed that this species possesses a unique combination of traits that are exclusively shared with either Gloeobacteria or Phycobacteria. For example, similar to Gloeobacter, it lacks thylakoids and circadian clock genes, but the carotenoid biosynthesis pathway is typical of Phycobacteria. Furthermore, Anthocerotibacter has one of the most reduced gene sets for photosystems and phycobilisomes among Cyanobacteria. Despite this, Anthocerotibacter is capable of oxygenic photosynthesis under a wide range of light intensities, albeit with much less efficiency. Given its key phylogenetic position, distinct trait combination, and availability as a culture, Anthocerotibacter opens a new window to further illuminate the dawn of oxygenic photosynthesis.

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