4.8 Article

Evolution of bacterial steroid biosynthesis and its impact on eukaryogenesis

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NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2101276118

关键词

eukaryogenesis; steroids; biomarker; cellular membrane; sequence reconstruction

资金

  1. Agouron Institute Postdoctoral fellowship
  2. NIH [R01AR069137]
  3. Department of Defense [MURI W911NF-16-1-0372]
  4. Human Frontier Science Program [RGP0041]

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Steroids play essential roles in eukaryotic endocytosis by regulating membrane properties. The evolution of eukaryotic cellular membranes is more related to bacteria rather than archaea. The transfer of key genes for steroid biosynthesis to eukaryotes may have been mediated by deltaproteobacteria. Resurrected steroid biosynthesis enzymes suggest similarities in the pathway between early eukaryotes and modern plants, with the requirement of molecular oxygen for establishing the modern eukaryotic cellular membrane.
Steroids are components of the eukaryotic cellular membrane and have indispensable roles in the process of eukaryotic endocytosis by regulating membrane fluidity and permeability. In particular, steroids may have been a structural prerequisite for the acquisition of mitochondria via endocytosis during eukaryogenesis. While eukaryotes are inferred to have evolved from an archaeal lineage, there is little similarity between the eukaryotic and archaeal cellular membranes. As such, the evolution of eukaryotic cellular membranes has limited our understanding of eukaryogenesis. Despite evolving from archaea, the eukaryotic cellular membrane is essentially a fatty acid bacterial-type membrane, which implies a substantial bacterial contribution to the evolution of the eukaryotic cellular membrane. Here, we address the evolution of steroid biosynthesis in eukaryotes by combining ancestral sequence reconstruction and comprehensive phylogenetic analyses of steroid biosynthesis genes. Contrary to the traditional assumption that eukaryotic steroid biosynthesis evolved within eukaryotes, most steroid biosynthesis genes are inferred to be derived from bacteria. In particular, aerobic deltaproteobacteria (myxobacteria) seem to have mediated the transfer of key genes for steroid biosynthesis to eukaryotes. Analyses of resurrected steroid biosynthesis enzymes suggest that the steroid biosynthesis pathway in early eukaryotes may have been similar to the pathway seen in modern plants and algae. These resurrected proteins also experimentally demonstrate that molecular oxygen was required to establish the modern eukaryotic cellular membrane during eukaryogenesis. Our study provides unique insight into relationships between early eukaryotes and other bacteria in addition to the well-known endosymbiosis with alphaproteobacteria.

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