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Origin of microbial biomineralization and magnetotaxis during the Archean.

Lea WeinischGreig A PatersonQiyun ZhuYinzhao WangEvguenia KopylovaYing LiRob KnightDennis A BazylinskiRixiang ZhuJoseph L KirschvinkYongxin Pan
Published in: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America (2017)
Microbes that synthesize minerals, a process known as microbial biomineralization, contributed substantially to the evolution of current planetary environments through numerous important geochemical processes. Despite its geological significance, the origin and evolution of microbial biomineralization remain poorly understood. Through combined metagenomic and phylogenetic analyses of deep-branching magnetotactic bacteria from the Nitrospirae phylum, and using a Bayesian molecular clock-dating method, we show here that the gene cluster responsible for biomineralization of magnetosomes, and the arrangement of magnetosome chain(s) within cells, both originated before or near the Archean divergence between the Nitrospirae and Proteobacteria This phylogenetic divergence occurred well before the Great Oxygenation Event. Magnetotaxis likely evolved due to environmental pressures conferring an evolutionary advantage to navigation via the geomagnetic field. Earth's dynamo must therefore have been sufficiently strong to sustain microbial magnetotaxis in the Archean, suggesting that magnetotaxis coevolved with the geodynamo over geological time.
Keyphrases
  • microbial community
  • genome wide
  • induced apoptosis
  • heavy metals
  • gene expression
  • oxidative stress
  • copy number
  • cell proliferation
  • cell cycle arrest
  • risk assessment
  • blood flow
  • genome wide identification