Literature DB >> 34784770

Snowball Earth, population bottleneck and Prochlorococcus evolution.

Hao Zhang1,2, Ying Sun2, Qinglu Zeng3, Sean A Crowe4, Haiwei Luo1,2.   

Abstract

Prochlorococcus are the most abundant photosynthetic organisms in the modern ocean. A massive DNA loss event occurred in their early evolutionary history, leading to highly reduced genomes in nearly all lineages, as well as enhanced efficiency in both nutrient uptake and light absorption. The environmental landscape that shaped this ancient genome reduction, however, remained unknown. Through careful molecular clock analyses, we established that this Prochlorococcus genome reduction occurred during the Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth climate catastrophe. The lethally low temperature and exceedingly dim light during the Snowball Earth event would have inhibited Prochlorococcus growth and proliferation, and caused severe population bottlenecks. These bottlenecks are recorded as an excess of deleterious mutations accumulated across genomic regions and inherited by descendant lineages. Prochlorococcus adaptation to extreme environmental conditions during Snowball Earth intervals can be inferred by tracing the evolutionary paths of genes that encode key metabolic potential. Key metabolic innovation includes modified lipopolysaccharide structure, strengthened peptidoglycan biosynthesis, the replacement of a sophisticated circadian clock with an hourglass-like mechanism that resets daily for dim light adaption and the adoption of ammonia diffusion as an efficient membrane transporter-independent mode of nitrogen acquisition. In this way, the Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth event may have altered the physiological characters of Prochlorococcus, shaping their ecologically vital role as the most abundant primary producers in the modern oceans.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Neoproterozoic Snowball Earth; Prochlorococcus; genome reduction; molecular dating

Mesh:

Year:  2021        PMID: 34784770      PMCID: PMC8596011          DOI: 10.1098/rspb.2021.1956

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Proc Biol Sci        ISSN: 0962-8452            Impact factor:   5.349


  49 in total

1.  Ice shelf microbial ecosystems in the high arctic and implications for life on snowball earth.

Authors:  W F Vincent; J A Gibson; R Pienitz; V Villeneuve; P A Broady; P B Hamilton; C Howard-Williams
Journal:  Naturwissenschaften       Date:  2000-03

2.  Niche partitioning among Prochlorococcus ecotypes along ocean-scale environmental gradients.

Authors:  Zackary I Johnson; Erik R Zinser; Allison Coe; Nathan P McNulty; E Malcolm S Woodward; Sallie W Chisholm
Journal:  Science       Date:  2006-03-24       Impact factor: 47.728

3.  Genome reduction by deletion of paralogs in the marine cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus.

Authors:  Haiwei Luo; Robert Friedman; Jijun Tang; Austin L Hughes
Journal:  Mol Biol Evol       Date:  2011-04-29       Impact factor: 16.240

4.  On the origins of oxygenic photosynthesis and aerobic respiration in Cyanobacteria.

Authors:  Rochelle M Soo; James Hemp; Donovan H Parks; Woodward W Fischer; Philip Hugenholtz
Journal:  Science       Date:  2017-03-31       Impact factor: 47.728

5.  Excess of non-conservative amino acid changes in marine bacterioplankton lineages with reduced genomes.

Authors:  Haiwei Luo; Yongjie Huang; Ramunas Stepanauskas; Jijun Tang
Journal:  Nat Microbiol       Date:  2017-06-12       Impact factor: 17.745

6.  Dynamics of a Snowball Earth ocean.

Authors:  Yosef Ashkenazy; Hezi Gildor; Martin Losch; Francis A Macdonald; Daniel P Schrag; Eli Tziperman
Journal:  Nature       Date:  2013-03-07       Impact factor: 49.962

7.  A neoproterozoic transition in the marine nitrogen cycle.

Authors:  Patricia Sánchez-Baracaldo; Andy Ridgwell; John A Raven
Journal:  Curr Biol       Date:  2014-02-27       Impact factor: 10.834

Review 8.  Regulation of bacterial heat shock stimulons.

Authors:  Wolfgang Schumann
Journal:  Cell Stress Chaperones       Date:  2016-08-12       Impact factor: 3.667

9.  High-light vs. low-light: effect of light acclimation on photosystem II composition and organization in Arabidopsis thaliana.

Authors:  Roman Kouřil; Emilie Wientjes; Jelle B Bultema; Roberta Croce; Egbert J Boekema
Journal:  Biochim Biophys Acta       Date:  2012-12-27

10.  Cryoconite pans on Snowball Earth: supraglacial oases for Cryogenian eukaryotes?

Authors:  P F Hoffman
Journal:  Geobiology       Date:  2016-07-15       Impact factor: 4.407

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  1 in total

1.  Assessing a Role of Genetic Drift for Deep-Time Evolutionary Events.

Authors:  Xiaoyuan Feng; Hao Zhang; Jijun Tang; Haiwei Luo
Journal:  Methods Mol Biol       Date:  2022
  1 in total

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