Published May 9, 2023 | Version v1
Journal article Open

Chitin utilization by marine picocyanobacteria and the evolution of a planktonic lifestyle

Description

Marine picocyanobacteria Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus, the most abundant photosynthetic cells in the oceans, are generally thought to have a primarily single-celled and free-living lifestyle. However, while studying the ability of picocyanobacteria to supplement photosynthetic carbon fixation with the use of exogenous organic carbon, we found the widespread occurrence of genes for breaking down chitin, an abundant source of organic carbon that exists primarily as particles. We show that cells that encode a chitin degradation pathway display chitin degradation activity, attach to chitin particles, and show enhanced growth under low light conditions when exposed to chitosan, a partially deacetylated soluble form of chitin. Marine chitin is largely derived from arthropods, which underwent major diversifications 520 to 535 Mya, close to when marine picocyanobacteria are inferred to have appeared in the ocean. Phylogenetic analyses confirm that the chitin utilization trait was acquired at the root of marine picocyanobacteria. Together this leads us to postulate that attachment to chitin particles allowed benthic cyanobacteria to emulate their mat-based lifestyle in the water column, initiating their expansion into the open ocean, seeding the rise of modern marine ecosystems. Subsequently, transitioning to a constitutive planktonic life without chitin associations led to cellular and genomic streamlining along a major early branch within Prochlorococcus. Our work highlights how the emergence of associations between organisms from different trophic levels, and their coevolution, creates opportunities for colonizing new environments. In this view, the rise of ecological complexity and the expansion of the biosphere are deeply intertwined processes.

Data availability

All other data are included in the manuscript and/or supporting information. All 886 raw data for the main text and figures are available for free download at European Nucleotide Archive (ENA) #PRJEB53957 (RNA-Seq data); Metabo-Lights #MTBLS5229 (metabolites data); and Dryad (https://doi.org/10.5061/dryad.gxd2547pp) (Phylogenomic data, including SI Appendix, Supplementary Text 1 file).

Files

Chitin-utilization-by-marine-picocyanobacteria.pdf

Files (5.6 MB)

Name Size Download all
Article
md5:c44e4511b4c97c8688810ed3b3e406fa
1.1 MB Preview Download
Datasets 1-5
md5:65926a845c375f5e32ea5ac93ca14f49
2.1 MB Preview Download
Appendix
md5:8baaa64aae0a4e04d3c2f8c6328ab969
2.3 MB Preview Download

Additional details

Identifiers

DOI
10.1073/pnas.2213271120
Other
oai:uchicago.tind.io:5920

Funding

Simons Foundation
509034SCFY20
Simons Foundation
509034FY20
Simons Foundation
SCOPE Award
Simons Foundation
Life Sciences Award
Simons Foundation
Life Sciences Award
Simons Foundation
Life Sciences Award
Simons Foundation
SCOPE Award
Simons Foundation
SCOPE Award
European Molecular Biology Organization (EMBO)
Long-Term Fellowship
Human Frontier Science Program
LT000069/2019-L

UChicago Information

Division(s)
Physical Sciences Division
Department(s)
Geophysical Sciences