| Literature DB >> 28783077 |
Abstract
Understanding the evolution of ancestral life, and especially the ability of some organisms to flourish in the variable environments experienced in Earth's early biosphere, requires knowledge of the characteristics and the environment of these ancestral organisms. Information about early life and environmental conditions has been obtained from fossil records and geological surveys. Recent advances in phylogenetic analysis, and an increasing number of protein sequences available in public databases, have made it possible to infer ancestral protein sequences possessed by ancient organisms. However, the in silico studies that assess the ancestral base content of ribosomal RNAs, the frequency of each amino acid in ancestral proteins, and estimate the environmental temperatures of ancient organisms, show conflicting results. The characterization of ancestral proteins reconstructed in vitro suggests that ancient organisms had very thermally stable proteins, and therefore were thermophilic or hyperthermophilic. Experimental data supports the idea that only thermophilic ancestors survived the catastrophic increase in temperature of the biosphere that was likely associated with meteorite impacts during the early history of Earth. In addition, by expanding the timescale and including more ancestral proteins for reconstruction, it appears as though the Earth's surface temperature gradually decreased over time, from Archean to present.Entities:
Keywords: Precambrian; ancestral sequence reconstruction; ancient biosphere; last universal common ancestor; phylogenetic analysis; thermophilicity
Year: 2017 PMID: 28783077 PMCID: PMC5617958 DOI: 10.3390/life7030033
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Life (Basel) ISSN: 2075-1729
Theoretical and in silico studies for predicting the environmental temperatures of early organisms.
| Target | Method | Conclusion | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| Common ancestors of Archaea and Bacteria | rRNA tree | Hyperthermophilic | [ |
| Bacterial common ancestors | rRNA tree | Mesophilic or thermophilic | [ |
| LUCA | G + C content in rRNA | Mesophilic | [ |
| LUCA | Reanalysis of the data used in [ | Thermophilic or hyperthermophilic | [ |
| LUCA | Evolution of reverse gyrase | Mesophilic or thermophilic | [ |
| LUCA | A gene for reverse gyrase found in a gene set of LUCA | Hyperthermophilic | [ |
| LUCA | G + C contents in rRNA and amino acid composition inferred using a non-homogeneous model | Psychrophilic or mesophilic | [ |
| LUCA | Amino acid composition inferred using a non-homogeneous model | Mesophilic | [ |
Figure 1A phylogenetic tree constructed from aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase sequences [18]. The position of Commonote (LUCA) is indicated with ‘a’.
Figure 2Flowchart of the procedure to infer an ancestral sequence and to reconstruct the ancestral protein in vitro.
Figure 3Relationship between the midpoint denaturation temperature of microbial nucleoside diphosphate kinases (NDKs) and their hosts’ optimum environmental temperatures. The optimum environmental temperature of LUCA is estimated from the calibration curve and the denaturation temperatures of the reconstructed NDKs that might be possessed by LUCA.
Figure 4Environmental temperature ranges inferred from the midpoint denaturation temperatures of the reconstructed NDK as a function of age, with uncertainty when respective ancestral organisms first appeared. Paleotemperatures inferred from isotope-based evidence in marine cherts are also shown for comparison (blue line) [86].
In vitro experimental studies for predicting the environmental temperatures of early organisms.
| Target | Method | Conclusion | Refs. |
|---|---|---|---|
| LUCA | Introduction of a few amino acids into the sequence of a modern thermophilic protein | Hyperthermophilic | [ |
| Bacterial common ancestors | Reconstruction of ancestral elongation factors | Thermophilic | [ |
| Common ancestor of Thermotogales | Reconstruction of ancestral | Hyperthermophilic | [ |
| LUCA | Reconstruction of ancestral NDKs using a homogeneous substitution model | Thermophilic or hyperthermophilic | [ |
| LUCA | Reconstruction of ancestral NDKs using a non-homogeneous substitution model | Hyperthermophilic | [ |