4.8 Article

Conservation of magnetite biomineralization genes in all domains of life and implications for magnetic sensing

出版社

NATL ACAD SCIENCES
DOI: 10.1073/pnas.2108655119

关键词

endosymbiosis; eukaryogenesis; exaptation; magnetoreception; sensory organelle

资金

  1. Coastal Oregon Marine Experiment Station
  2. Project CROOS
  3. Collaborative Research on Oregon Ocean Salmon - Oregon Watershed Enhancement Board Fund (National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration grant) [NA07NMF4540337]
  4. Collaborative Research on Oregon Ocean Salmon - Klamath Disaster Relief Fund (National Oceanic Atmospheric Administration grant) [NA07NMF4540337]
  5. National Marine Fisheries Service funds
  6. Oregon State University scholarships
  7. University of Strasbourg Institute for Advanced Studies
  8. Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft [395940726-SFB 1372]
  9. NSF MRI award [1920304]
  10. Division Of Computer and Network Systems
  11. Direct For Computer & Info Scie & Enginr [1920304] Funding Source: National Science Foundation

向作者/读者索取更多资源

This study reveals that salmonid olfactory epithelium contains magnetite crystals, indicating a shared evolutionary history of magnetoreception between eukaryotes and prokaryotes. Additionally, prokaryote biomineralization genes were found to be present in diverse eukaryote taxa, including the archaea Lokiarch-aeota, suggesting their potential role in eukaryogenesis.
Animals use geomagnetic fields for navigational cues, yet the sensory mechanism underlying magnetic perception remains poorly understood. One idea is that geomagnetic fields are physically transduced by magnetite crystals contained inside specialized receptor cells, but evidence for intracellular, biogenic magnetite in eukaryotes is scant. Certain bacteria produce magnetite crystals inside intracellular compartments, representing the most ancient form of biomineralization known and having evolved prior to emergence of the crown group of eukaryotes, raising the question of whether magnetite biomineralization in eukaryotes and prokaryotes might share a common evolutionary history. Here, we discover that salmonid olfactory epithelium contains magnetite crystals arranged in compact clusters and determine that genes differentially expressed in magnetic olfactory cells, contrasted to nonmagnetic olfactory cells, share ancestry with an ancient prokaryote magnetite biomineralization system, consistent with exaptation for use in eukaryotic magnetoreception. We also show that 11 prokaryote biomineralization genes are universally present among a diverse set of eukaryote taxa and that nine of those genes are present within the Asgard Glade of archaea Lokiarch-aeota that affiliates with eukaryotes in phylogenomic analysis. Consistent with deep homology, we present an evolutionary genetics hypothesis for magnetite formation among eukaryotes to motivate convergent approaches for examining magnetite-based magnetoreception, molecular origins of matrix-associated biomineralization processes, and eukaryogenesis.

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