Abstract

AbstractDiscovery of the Asgard superphylum of archaea provides new evidence supporting the two‐domain model of life: eukaryotes originated from an Asgard‐related archaeon that engulfed a bacterial endosymbiont. However, how eukaryotes acquired bacterial‐like membrane lipids with a sn‐glycerol‐3‐phosphate (G3P) backbone instead of the archaeal‐like sn‐glycerol‐1‐phosphate (G1P) backbone remains unknown. In this study, we reconstituted archaeal lipid production in Saccharomyces cerevisiae by expressing unsaturated archaeol‐synthesizing enzymes. Using Golden Gate cloning for pathway assembly, modular gene replacement was performed, revealing the potential biosynthesis of both G1P‐ and G3P‐based unsaturated archaeol by uncultured Asgard archaea. Unexpectedly, hybrid neutral lipids containing both archaeal isoprenoids and eukaryotic fatty acids were observed in recombinant S. cerevisiae. The ability of yeast and archaeal diacylglycerol acyltransferases to synthesize such hybrid lipids was demonstrated.

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