Abstract

Oxygen appears to be one of the key factors in understanding the evolution of life on Earth. Almost absent during more than 2 billion years, its subsequent increase is correlated with the emergence of oxygenic photosynthesis by Cyanobacteria, followed by aerobic Prokaryotes and eventually Eukaryotes, all primitively aerobic, and more recently, the development of complex multicellular organisms. However, in some reduced environments, still present at the surface of the Earth and even more so in ocean depths (hydrothermal vents, cold seeps, massive organic falls,...), anaerobic or micro-aerobic Prokaryotes continue to grow, including some chemoautotrophic bacteria deriving energy from sulfide oxidation for instance. A few Metazoa have managed to collaborate with such chemoautotroph Prokaryotes, the most abundant species forming endosymbiotic associations. The most studied of these endosymbioses (the mussels Bathymodiolus, the vestimentiferan tubeworm Riftia pachyptila, or the clams Calyptogena) have revealed important differences in the degree of interdependence between host and symbionts, and in the mode of symbiont transmission. The evolutive process of these symbioses is reminiscent of the primary endosymbioses which have given rise to the organelles of heterotrophic Eukaryotes (mitochondria) and phototrophic Eukaryotes (chloroplasts). The study of these modern days biological models could shed light on symbiogenesis itself and also potentially reveal thiotrophic Eukaryotes as a new lineage.

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