Time-resolved Phylogenomics Analysis Reveals Patterns In Biosphere Nutrient Limitation Through Earth History

editorAstrobiology5 hours ago5 Views

Time-resolved Phylogenomics Analysis Reveals Patterns In Biosphere Nutrient Limitation Through Earth History

Tree of life (“species tree”) used for gene reconciliation analyses, showing reconstructed habitats for specific phyla over time. Phyla are color-coded and grouped to match to the larger phylum groups used for habitat reconstructions (see Methods). Outer ring shows habitat designations for all leaves of the species tree. Pie charts superimposed on internal nodes indicate the habitat reconstruction results of all organisms in the phylum (including additional genomes not represented in the species tree), with each wedge representing the probability that the internal node resided in a terrestrial (grey), shallow marine (light blue) or deep marine (dark blue) habitat. Habitat reconstruction results were based on much larger trees within each phylum (beyond those shown on the tree), so habitat reconstruction results were superimposed onto this tree for visualization purposes. — biorxiv.org

The co-evolution of life and Earth has profoundly transformed global biogeochemical cycles over the past 3.5 billion years.

These cycles, in turn, have dictated the availability of essential nutrients like phosphorus, nitrogen, and iron, thereby affecting primary productivity and the scale of the Earth’s biosphere. Despite the critical role of nutrient limitation in shaping the size and scope of the biosphere, significant uncertainties persist about which nutrients were globally limiting at various points in Earth history.

Here, we use a phylogenomic approach to trace the origin and spread of genes associated with nutrient limitation over time. We show that genes associated with phosphorus limitation emerged relatively early in life’s history, whereas genes associated with nitrogen limitation emerged later, closer to the Great Oxidation Event. In terms of iron limitation, we present novel evidence that siderophores, compounds that facilitate iron uptake, may have arisen as early as the Archean.

Overall, our results have important implications for understanding how the geosphere has influenced the scale and extent of life on Earth for the past 4 billion years.

Time-resolved phylogenomics analysis reveals patterns in biosphere nutrient limitation through Earth history, biorxiv.org

Astrobiology, evolution,

Explorers Club Fellow, ex-NASA Space Station Payload manager/space biologist, Away Teams, Journalist, Lapsed climber, Synaesthete, Na’Vi-Jedi-Freman-Buddhist-mix, ASL, Devon Island and Everest Base Camp veteran, (he/him) 🖖🏻

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