A geological timescale for bacterial evolution and oxygen adaptation

Open Access
Authors
  • Adrián A. Davín
  • Ben J. Woodcroft
  • Rochelle M. Soo
  • Benoit Morel
  • Ranjani Murali
  • Dominik Schrempf
  • James W. Clark
  • Sandra Álvarez-Carretero
  • Bastien Boussau
  • Edmund R.R. Moody
  • Lénárd L. Szánthó
  • Etienne Richy
  • Davide Pisani
  • James Hemp
  • Woodward W. Fischer
  • Philip C.J. Donoghue
  • Anja Spang
  • Philip Hugenholtz
  • Tom A. Williams
  • Gergely J. Szöllősi
Publication date 04-04-2025
Journal Science
Article number eadp1853
Volume | Issue number 388 | 6742
Pages (from-to) 1-12
Number of pages 12
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute for Biodiversity and Ecosystem Dynamics (IBED)
Abstract

Microbial life has dominated Earth’s history but left a sparse fossil record, greatly hindering our understanding of evolution in deep time. However, bacterial metabolism has left signatures in the geochemical record, most conspicuously the Great Oxidation Event (GOE). We combine machine learning and phylogenetic reconciliation to infer ancestral bacterial transitions to aerobic lifestyles, linking them to the GOE to calibrate the bacterial time tree. Extant bacterial phyla trace their diversity to the Archaean and Proterozoic, and bacterial families prior to the Phanerozoic. We infer that most bacterial phyla were ancestrally anaerobic and adopted aerobic lifestyles after the GOE. However, in the cyanobacterial ancestor, aerobic metabolism likely predated the GOE, which may have facilitated the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis.

Document type Article
Note With supplementary material.
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adp1853
Other links https://www.scopus.com/pages/publications/105002820095
Downloads
science.adp1853 (Final published version)
Supplementary materials
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