Why do alpha-cyanobacteria with form 1A RuBisCO dominate aquatic habitats worldwide? (CYANORUB)

Lead Research Organisation: University of Warwick
Department Name: School of Life Sciences

Abstract

RuBisCO is one of the most abundant enzymes on Earth. Virtually all food webs depend on it to supply fixed carbon. In aerobic
environments, RuBisCO struggles to distinguish efficiently between CO2 and O2. To compensate, many photosynthetic organisms
have developed CO2-concentrating mechanisms (CCMs) to increase the [CO2] around the RuBisCO active site. In cyanobacteria,
carboxysomes represent one such CCM, of which two independent forms exist: alpha and beta. This ancient photoautotrophic
lineage has succeeded in colonizing habitats worldwide, being primary producers of great ecological importance. Amongst them,
cells of the genera Prochlorococcus and Synechococcus, the two most abundant photosynthetic taxa on Earth, dominate oceanic
ecosystems. These marine picocyanobacteria possess a form IA RuBisCO and alpha-carboxysomes (so-called alpha-cyanobacteria).
The remainder of the cyanobacterial radiation was thought to possess beta-carboxysomes and a form IB RuBisCO (beta-
cyanobacteria), including freshwater unicellular and filamentous bloom-forming taxa comprising model organisms used in
laboratories worldwide e.g. Synechococcus elongatus and Synechocystis. However, recently I have isolated and sequenced the
genomes of many new unicellular freshwater picocyanobacteria that are phylogenetically much closer to their marine counterparts
and which also possess a form IA RuBisCO and alpha-carboxysomes. Moreover, these organisms have been detected in high
abundance in freshwater lakes and reservoirs worldwide. Thus, alpha-cyanobacteria dominate all aquatic systems. CYANORUB seeks
to address why this is the case. We hypothesize that alpha-cyanobacteria dominate large, temporally stable water masses,
characterized by well-buffered pHs and relatively slow changes in carbonate chemistry. CYANORUB will be crucial for accurately
predicting the biosphere's response to changing CO2, pH and carbonate chemistry and has biotechnological applications aimed at
improving plant growth.

Publications

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Torcello-Requena A (2024) A distinct, high-affinity, alkaline phosphatase facilitates occupation of P-depleted environments by marine picocyanobacteria. in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America

 
Description We have identified a potentially novel cellular mechanism that explain how globally dominant cyanobacteria adapt to an oligotrophic lifestyle that we call the oligotrophy hypothesis. This previously overlooked mechanism involves the horizontal gene transfer (HGT) of an inorganic carbon concentrating mechanism (CCM) from distantly related ? proteobacteria. By testing this hypothesis, we will provide a new mechanism that explains how Earth's biogeochemistry transformed during the Neoproterozoic, causing a rise in O2 and providing the pathway for evolution of modern complex life.
Exploitation Route The funding might being taken forward as a means to introduce the most efficient Form IA RuBisCO and the associated alpa carboxysome into a higher eukaryote to ultimately boost carbon fixation potential.
Sectors Energy

Environment