Possible missing link in evolution of life found in the deep Black Sea

Current research suggests that more complex life-forms, including humans, evolved from a symbiosis event of Bacteria and another single-celled organism known as Archaea. However, evidence of a transition period in which the two organisms mixed were nowhere to be found. That is, until now. In the deep waters of the Black Sea, scientists from Utrecht 木瓜福利影视, NIOZ and Radboud 木瓜福利影视 found microbes that may form the unexpected missing link in the evolution of life. The study was published in the prestigious ISME Journal.

Changing skins

Cells are surrounded by a layer of membrane lipids that protect them from changes in their environment such as temperature, much in the same way that our skin changes when we are cold or exposed to the sun. Lead author, UU Associate Professor and NIOZ senior scientist Dr. Laura Villanueva explains why they make such interesting biomarkers. 鈥淲hen a cell dies, these lipids preserve like fossils and hold ancient-old information on Earths鈥 early environmental conditions.鈥 

Our tree of life includes small and simple cells (Bacteria and Archaea) and more complex cells (Eukaryotes), including animals and humans. Bacteria and Eukaryotes share a similar lipid membrane. Looking at Archaea, their 鈥榮kin鈥 or membrane looks very different and is primarily designed to help these microorganisms to survive in extreme environments. 鈥淭his 鈥榣ipid divide鈥, or difference in membranes between Bacteria and Eukaryotes on the one hand and Archaea on the other, is believed to have happened after the emergence of Bacteria and Archaea from the last universal cellular ancestor,鈥 Villanueva explains.

View from a research boat into the sea
The RV Pelagia during the Black Sea expedition. Photo: Laura Villanueva.

Missing piece hidden in the deep Black Sea

The leading theory is that Eukaryotes evolved from a symbiosis event between archaeal and bacterial cells in which the archaeal cell was the host. But how does this work when their 鈥榮kins鈥 are so different and share no sign of common ancestry? 鈥淭o explain the creation of more complex life-forms, the archaeal membrane must have made a switch to a bacterial type membrane. Such a switch likely needed a transition period in which the two membrane types were mixed,鈥 says Villanueva. However, mixed lipid membranes had never been found in microbes until Villanueva鈥檚 team made an unexpected discovery in de deep waters of the Black Sea. 

鈥淲e found a possible missing piece of this puzzle in the Black Sea,鈥 Villanueva says. 鈥淗ere, an abundant group of bacteria thrive in the deep-sea, absent of oxygen and with high sulphide concentration. We discovered that the genetic material of this group did not only carry pathway genes for bacterial lipids, but archaeal ones as well.鈥 The peculiarity was also found in the genetic material of other, closely related Bacteria and supports the idea that this ability to create 鈥榤ixed鈥 membranes is more widespread than previously thought. This discovery sheds new light on the evolution of all cellular life forms and may have important consequences for the interpretation of archaeal lipid fossils in the geological record and paleoclimate reconstructions.

Publication

Villanueva, L., von Meijenfeldt, F.A.B., Westbye, A.B., Yadav, S., Hopmans, E.C., Dutilh, B.E., Sinninge Damst茅, J.S.  ISME J (2020). Bridging the membrane lipid divide: bacteria of the FCB group superphylum have the potential to synthesize archaeal ether lipids. ISME J (2020).