4.7 Article

The Archean origin of oxygenic photosynthesis and extant cyanobacterial lineages

Journal

Publisher

ROYAL SOC
DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.0675

Keywords

cyanobacteria; molecular clock; horizontal gene transfer; Great Oxygenation Event; Archean; Cryogenian

Funding

  1. Simons Foundation Collaboration on the Origin of Life [339603, 327126]
  2. NSF Integrated Earth Systems award EAR [1615426]
  3. Directorate For Geosciences
  4. Division Of Earth Sciences [1615426] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

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The coevolution of oxygenic phototrophs and the environment is recorded in modern organisms' genomes, geochemical signals, and Proterozoic microfossils. Various interpretations of the fossil record and incorporation of relative dating from horizontal gene transfers improve the precision of age estimates, supporting an Archean origin of crown-group Cyanobacteria and evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis centuries before the Great Oxygenation Event.
The record of the coevolution of oxygenic phototrophs and the environment is preserved in three forms: genomes of modern organisms, diverse geochemical signals of surface oxidation and diagnostic Proterozoic microfossils. When calibrated by fossils, genomic data form the basis of molecular clock analyses. However, different interpretations of the geochemical record, fossil calibrations and evolutionary models produce a wide range of age estimates that are often conflicting. Here, we show that multiple interpretations of the cyanobacterial fossil record are consistent with an Archean origin of crown-group Cyanobacteria. We further show that incorporating relative dating information from horizontal gene transfers greatly improves the precision of these age estimates, by both providing a novel empirical criterion for selecting evolutionary models, and increasing the stringency of sampling of posterior age estimates. Independent of any geochemical evidence or hypotheses, these results support oxygenic photosynthesis evolving at least several hundred million years before the Great Oxygenation Event (GOE), a rapid diversification of major cyanobacterial lineages around the time of the GOE, and a post-Cryogenian origin of extant marine picocyanobacterial diversity.

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