On the trail of iron uptake in ancestral Cyanobacteria on early Earth

Enzingmüller‐Bleyl, Tristan C.
Boden, Joanne S.
Herrmann, Achim J. ORCIDiD
Ebel, Katharina W.
Sánchez‐Baracaldo, Patricia
Frankenberg‐Dinkel, Nicole
Gehringer, Michelle M. ORCIDiD

DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12515
Persistent URL: http://resolver.sub.uni-goettingen.de/purl?gldocs-11858/10321
Enzingmüller‐Bleyl, Tristan C.; Boden, Joanne S.; Herrmann, Achim J.; Ebel, Katharina W.; Sánchez‐Baracaldo, Patricia; Frankenberg‐Dinkel, Nicole; Gehringer, Michelle M., 2022: On the trail of iron uptake in ancestral Cyanobacteria on early Earth. In: Geobiology, 20, 6, 776-789, DOI: https://doi.org/10.1111/gbi.12515. 
 
Enzingmüller‐Bleyl, Tristan C.; 1 Department of Microbiology University of Kaiserslautern Kaiserslautern Germany
Boden, Joanne S.; 2 School of Geographical Sciences, Faculty of Science University of Bristol Bristol UK
Herrmann, Achim J.; 1 Department of Microbiology University of Kaiserslautern Kaiserslautern Germany
Ebel, Katharina W.; 1 Department of Microbiology University of Kaiserslautern Kaiserslautern Germany
Sánchez‐Baracaldo, Patricia; 2 School of Geographical Sciences, Faculty of Science University of Bristol Bristol UK
Frankenberg‐Dinkel, Nicole; 1 Department of Microbiology University of Kaiserslautern Kaiserslautern Germany

Abstract

Cyanobacteria oxygenated Earth's atmosphere ~2.4 billion years ago, during the Great Oxygenation Event (GOE), through oxygenic photosynthesis. Their high iron requirement was presumably met by high levels of Fe(II) in the anoxic Archean environment. We found that many deeply branching Cyanobacteria, including two Gloeobacter and four Pseudanabaena spp., cannot synthesize the Fe(II) specific transporter, FeoB. Phylogenetic and relaxed molecular clock analyses find evidence that FeoB and the Fe(III) transporters, cFTR1 and FutB, were present in Proterozoic, but not earlier Archaean lineages of Cyanobacteria. Furthermore Pseudanabaena sp. PCC7367, an early diverging marine, benthic strain grown under simulated Archean conditions, constitutively expressed cftr1, even after the addition of Fe(II). Our genetic profiling suggests that, prior to the GOE, ancestral Cyanobacteria may have utilized alternative metal iron transporters such as ZIP, NRAMP, or FicI, and possibly also scavenged exogenous siderophore bound Fe(III), as they only acquired the necessary Fe(II) and Fe(III) transporters during the Proterozoic. Given that Cyanobacteria arose 3.3–3.6 billion years ago, it is possible that limitations in iron uptake may have contributed to the delay in their expansion during the Archean, and hence the oxygenation of the early Earth.