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Carbon isotope evidence for the global physiology of Proterozoic cyanobacteria
- Source :
- Science Advances
- Publication Year :
- 2020
-
Abstract
- Carboxysomes evolved due to rising O2, not falling CO2, enabling planktic cyanobacteria to flourish during earth’s middle age.<br />Ancestral cyanobacteria are assumed to be prominent primary producers after the Great Oxidation Event [≈2.4 to 2.0 billion years (Ga) ago], but carbon isotope fractionation by extant marine cyanobacteria (α-cyanobacteria) is inconsistent with isotopic records of carbon fixation by primary producers in the mid-Proterozoic eon (1.8 to 1.0 Ga ago). To resolve this disagreement, we quantified carbon isotope fractionation by a wild-type planktic β-cyanobacterium (Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002), an engineered Proterozoic analog lacking a CO2-concentrating mechanism, and cyanobacterial mats. At mid-Proterozoic pH and pCO2 values, carbon isotope fractionation by the wild-type β-cyanobacterium is fully consistent with the Proterozoic carbon isotope record, suggesting that cyanobacteria with CO2-concentrating mechanisms were apparently the major primary producers in the pelagic Proterozoic ocean, despite atmospheric CO2 levels up to 100 times modern. The selectively permeable microcompartments central to cyanobacterial CO2-concentrating mechanisms (“carboxysomes”) likely emerged to shield rubisco from O2 during the Great Oxidation Event.
- Subjects :
- 0106 biological sciences
Cyanobacteria
Ribulose-Bisphosphate Carboxylase
01 natural sciences
Carbon Cycle
03 medical and health sciences
Research Articles
030304 developmental biology
Synechococcus
Evolutionary Biology
0303 health sciences
Carbon Isotopes
Multidisciplinary
biology
Primary producers
Proterozoic
Chemistry
Great Oxygenation Event
RuBisCO
Carbon fixation
SciAdv r-articles
Carbon Dioxide
biology.organism_classification
Carbon
Carboxysome
Geochemistry
Isotopes of carbon
Environmental chemistry
biology.protein
bacteria
Research Article
010606 plant biology & botany
Subjects
Details
- ISSN :
- 23752548
- Volume :
- 7
- Issue :
- 2
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- Science advances
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....46d31df8d46f0d3e6f3d0a8c5dda916b