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Coevolution of metal availability and nitrogen assimilation in cyanobacteria and algae
Authors:J. B. GLASS  F. WOLFE-SIMON   A. D. ANBAR
Affiliation:School of Earth and Space Exploration, Arizona State University, Tempe AZ 85287, USA;
Department of Earth and Planetary Sciences, Harvard University, Cambridge, MA 02467, USA, and;
Department of Chemistry and Biochemistry, Arizona State University, Tempe, AZ 85287, USA
Abstract:Marine primary producers adapted over eons to the changing chemistry of the oceans. Because a number of metalloenzymes are necessary for N assimilation, changes in the availability of transition metals posed a particular challenge to the supply of this critical nutrient that regulates marine biomass and productivity. Integrating recently developed geochemical, biochemical, and genetic evidence, we infer that the use of metals in N assimilation – particularly Fe and Mo – can be understood in terms of the history of metal availability through time. Anoxic, Fe-rich Archean oceans were conducive to the evolution of Fe-using enzymes that assimilate abiogenic     and     The N demands of an expanding biosphere were satisfied by the evolution of biological N2 fixation, possibly utilizing only Fe. Trace O2 in late Archean environments, and the eventual 'Great Oxidation Event' c . 2.3 Ga, mobilized metals such as Mo, enabling the evolution of Mo (or V)-based N2 fixation and the Mo-dependent enzymes for     assimilation and denitrification by prokaryotes. However, the subsequent onset of deep-sea euxinia, an increasingly-accepted idea, may have kept ocean Mo inventories low and depressed Fe, limiting the rate of N2 fixation and the supply of fixed N. Eukaryotic ecosystems may have been particularly disadvantaged by N scarcity and the high Mo requirement of eukaryotic     assimilation. Thorough ocean oxygenation in the Neoproterozoic led to Mo-rich oceans, possibly contributing to the proliferation of eukaryotes and thus the Cambrian explosion of metazoan life. These ideas can be tested by more intensive study of the metal requirements in N assimilation and the biological strategies for metal uptake, regulation, and storage.
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