Back to Search Start Over

The cyanobacterium Prochlorococcus has divergent light-harvesting antennae and may have evolved in a low-oxygen ocean

Authors :
Carlos Henríquez-Castillo
Salvador Ramírez-Flandes
Alejandro A. Murillo
Ramunas Stepanauskas
Alvaro M Plominsky
Connor Morgan-Lang
Steven J. Hallam
Osvaldo Ulloa
Source :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 118
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 2021.

Abstract

Marine picocyanobacteria of the genus Prochlorococcus are the most abundant photosynthetic organisms in the modern ocean, where they exert a profound influence on elemental cycling and energy flow. The use of transmembrane chlorophyll complexes instead of phycobilisomes as light-harvesting antennae is considered a defining attribute of Prochlorococcus Its ecology and evolution are understood in terms of light, temperature, and nutrients. Here, we report single-cell genomic information on previously uncharacterized phylogenetic lineages of this genus from nutrient-rich anoxic waters of the eastern tropical North and South Pacific Ocean. The most basal lineages exhibit optical and genotypic properties of phycobilisome-containing cyanobacteria, indicating that the characteristic light-harvesting antenna of the group is not an ancestral attribute. Additionally, we found that all the indigenous lineages analyzed encode genes for pigment biosynthesis under oxygen-limited conditions, a trait shared with other freshwater and coastal marine cyanobacteria. Our findings thus suggest that Prochlorococcus diverged from other cyanobacteria under low-oxygen conditions before transitioning from phycobilisomes to transmembrane chlorophyll complexes and may have contributed to the oxidation of the ancient ocean.

Details

ISSN :
10916490 and 00278424
Volume :
118
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........05d5c5707c77e6aa2d2422114aaa7f29
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1073/pnas.2025638118