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Published October 3, 2017 | Published + Supplemental Material
Journal Article Open

Evolution of the 3-hydroxypropionate bicycle and recent transfer of anoxygenic photosynthesis into the Chloroflexi

Abstract

Various lines of evidence from both comparative biology and the geologic record make it clear that the biochemical machinery for anoxygenic photosynthesis was present on early Earth and provided the evolutionary stock from which oxygenic photosynthesis evolved ca. 2.3 billion years ago. However, the taxonomic identity of these early anoxygenic phototrophs is uncertain, including whether or not they remain extant. Several phototrophic bacterial clades are thought to have evolved before oxygenic photosynthesis emerged, including the Chloroflexi, a phylum common across a wide range of modern environments. Although Chloroflexi have traditionally been thought to be an ancient phototrophic lineage, genomics has revealed a much greater metabolic diversity than previously appreciated. Here, using a combination of comparative genomics and molecular clock analyses, we show that phototrophic members of the Chloroflexi phylum are not particularly ancient, having evolved well after the rise of oxygen (ca. 867 million years ago), and thus cannot be progenitors of oxygenic photosynthesis. Similarly, results show that the carbon fixation pathway that defines this clade—the 3-hydroxypropionate bicycle—evolved late in Earth history as a result of a series of horizontal gene transfer events, explaining the lack of geological evidence for this pathway based on the carbon isotope record. These results demonstrate the role of horizontal gene transfer in the recent metabolic innovations expressed within this phylum, including its importance in the development of a novel carbon fixation pathway.

Additional Information

© 2017 National Academy of Sciences. Edited by Bob B. Buchanan, University of California, Berkeley, CA, and approved August 21, 2017 (received for review June 14, 2017). Published online before print September 18, 2017. P.M.S. was supported by the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation through Grant GBMF 2550.04 to the Life Sciences Research Foundation, a Society in Science–Branco Weiss fellowship from ETH Zurich, and the Joint BioEnergy Institute, which is supported by the US Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Biological and Environmental Research, through Contract DE-AC02-05CH11231. L.M.W. received support from a NASA Earth and Space Science Fellowship (NNX16AP39H). W.W.F. acknowledges funding from the Agouron Institute and the David and Lucile Packard Foundation. Author contributions: P.M.S., L.M.W., and W.W.F. designed research, performed research, analyzed data, and wrote the paper. The authors declare no conflict of interest. This article is a PNAS Direct Submission. This article contains supporting information online at www.pnas.org/lookup/suppl/doi:10.1073/pnas.1710798114/-/DCSupplemental.

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Published - PNAS-2017-Shih-10749-54.pdf

Supplemental Material - pnas.1710798114.sapp.pdf

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August 21, 2023
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