Abstract

The transition between cell envelopes with one membrane (Gram-positive or monoderm) and those with two membranes (Gram-negative or diderm) is a fundamental open question in the evolution of Bacteria. Evidence of the presence of two independent diderm lineages, the Halanaerobiales and the Negativicutes, within the classically monoderm Firmicutes has blurred the monoderm/diderm divide and specifically anticipated that other members with an outer membrane (OM) might exist in this phylum. Here, by screening 1,639 genomes of uncultured Firmicutes for signatures of an OM, we highlight a third and deep branching diderm clade, the Limnochordia, strengthening the hypothesis of a diderm ancestor and the occurrence of independent transitions leading to the monoderm phenotype. Phyletic patterns of over 176,000 protein families constituting the Firmicutes pan-proteome identify those that strongly correlate with the diderm phenotype and suggest the existence of new potential players in OM biogenesis. In contrast, we find practically no largely conserved core of monoderms, a fact possibly linked to different ways of adapting to repeated OM losses. Phylogenetic analysis of a concatenation of main OM components totalling nearly 2,000 amino acid positions illustrates the common origin and vertical evolution of most diderm bacterial envelopes. Finally, mapping the presence/absence of OM markers onto the tree of Bacteria shows the overwhelming presence of diderm phyla and the non-monophyly of monoderm ones, pointing to an early origin of two-membraned cells and the derived nature of the Gram-positive envelope following multiple OM losses.

Highlights

  • The cell envelope is one of the most essential and ancient features of life; yet, most aspects of its evolutionary history remain obscure

  • 70 We retrieved 1,639 genomes annotated as Firmicutes from the Uncultured Bacteria and Archaea (UBA)

  • 75 1,125 UBA genomes in a phylum-level tree together with 230 representatives of all Firmicutes families, 76 and members of major bacterial phyla as outgroup (Methods)

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Summary

Introduction

The cell envelope is one of the most essential and ancient features of life; yet, most aspects of its evolutionary history remain obscure. It is unclear how cell envelopes with two membranes. 44 (Gram-negative or diderms) and those with one membrane (Gram-positive or monoderms) came into. two clades, the Negativicutes and the Halanaerobiales, that display an outer membrane (OM) with lipopolysaccharide (LPS). Identification and annotation of putative OM markers in the genomes of Halanaerobiales and Negativicutes suggested that these two lineages display unique cell envelopes with specific characteristics, such as for example the mechanism of OM attachment, which

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