Abstract

Bacteria and archaea are characterized by an amazing metabolic diversity, which allows them to persist in diverse and often extreme habitats. Apart from oxygenic photosynthesis and oxidative phosphorylation, well-studied processes from chloroplasts and mitochondria of plants and animals, prokaryotes utilize various chemo- or lithotrophic modes, such as anoxygenic photosynthesis, iron oxidation and reduction, sulfate reduction, and methanogenesis. Most bioenergetic pathways have a similar general structure, with an electron transport chain composed of protein complexes acting as electron donors and acceptors, as well as a central cytochrome complex, mobile electron carriers, and an ATP synthase. While each pathway has been studied in considerable detail in isolation, not much is known about their relative evolutionary relationships. Wanting to address how this metabolic diversity evolved, we mapped the distribution of nine bioenergetic modes on a phylogenetic tree based on 16S rRNA sequences from 272 species representing the full diversity of prokaryotic lineages. This highlights the patchy distribution of many pathways across different lineages, and suggests either up to 26 independent origins or 17 horizontal gene transfer events. Next, we used comparative genomics and phylogenetic analysis of all subunits of the F0F1 ATP synthase, common to most bacterial lineages regardless of their bioenergetic mode. Our results indicate an ancient origin of this protein complex, and no clustering based on bioenergetic mode, which suggests that no special modifications are needed for the ATP synthase to work with different electron transport chains. Moreover, examination of the ATP synthase genetic locus indicates various gene rearrangements in the different bacterial lineages, ancient duplications of atpI and of the beta subunit of the F0 subcomplex, as well as more recent stochastic lineage-specific and species-specific duplications of all subunits. We discuss the implications of the overall pattern of conservation and flexibility of the F0F1 ATP synthase genetic locus.

Highlights

  • Bacteria and archaea use diverse bioenergetic electron transport chains to generate ATP

  • Our results indicate an ancient origin of this protein complex, and no clustering based on bioenergetic mode, which suggests that no special modifications are needed for the ATP synthase to work with different electron transport chains

  • Wanting to address how this metabolic diversity evolved, we mapped the distribution of nine bioenergetic modes across all the major lineages of bacteria and archaea

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Summary

Introduction

Bacteria and archaea use diverse bioenergetic electron transport chains to generate ATP. Apart from photosynthesis and aerobic respiration, many other bacterial and archaeal bioenergetic pathways have been characterized in considerable biochemical detail The origins of the diversity of bioenergetic pathways, and their evolutionary relationships, have so far received relatively little attention. Did each pathway evolve independently or did they all evolve from a common ancestral metabolic mode? Molecular evolutionary studies of shared proteins amongst prokaryotes, coupled to data from the geological record, indicate that the vast majority of extant bioenergetic pathways evolved within the first billion years from the origin of life on earth [13,14]. When 16S rRNA phylogenetic analysis is carried out for a variety of prokaryotes, organisms that utilize different bioenergetic pathways don’t group into clear monophyletic

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