AI Article Synopsis

  • Recent discoveries of diverse microbial eukaryotes have reshaped the eukaryotic tree of life, emphasizing the significance of the Metamonada supergroup in understanding the evolution of eukaryotic cells and their mitochondrial adaptations in low-oxygen environments.* -
  • Metamonads possess mitochondrion-related organelles (MROs) that lack classical aerobic functions and have unique metabolic processes, such as ATP synthesis through substrate-level phosphorylation and hydrogen production, raising questions about their evolutionary transition from traditional mitochondria.* -
  • Through phylogenomic analysis of two newly identified anaerobic protists from the genus Anaeramoeba, researchers suggest that the common ancestor of Metamonada may have had more classical mitochondrial features,

Article Abstract

Discoveries of diverse microbial eukaryotes and their inclusion in comprehensive phylogenomic analyses have crucially re-shaped the eukaryotic tree of life in the 21st century. At the deepest level, eukaryotic diversity comprises 9-10 "supergroups." One of these supergroups, the Metamonada, is particularly important to our understanding of the evolutionary dynamics of eukaryotic cells, including the remodeling of mitochondrial function. All metamonads thrive in low-oxygen environments and lack classical aerobic mitochondria, instead possessing mitochondrion-related organelles (MROs) with metabolisms that are adapted to low-oxygen conditions. These MROs lack an organellar genome, do not participate in the Krebs cycle and oxidative phosphorylation, and often synthesize ATP by substrate-level phosphorylation coupled to hydrogen production. The events that occurred during the transition from an oxygen-respiring mitochondrion to a functionally streamlined MRO early in metamonad evolution remain largely unknown. Here, we report transcriptomes of two recently described, enigmatic, anaerobic protists from the genus Anaeramoeba. Using phylogenomic analysis, we show that these species represent a divergent, phylum-level lineage in the tree of metamonads, emerging as a sister group of the Parabasalia and reordering the deep branching order of the metamonad tree. Metabolic reconstructions of the Anaeramoeba MROs reveal many "classical" mitochondrial features previously not seen in metamonads, including a disulfide relay import system, propionate production, and amino acid metabolism. Our findings suggest that the cenancestor of Metamonada likely had MROs with more classical mitochondrial features than previously anticipated and demonstrate how discoveries of novel lineages of high taxonomic rank continue to transform our understanding of early eukaryote evolution.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.cub.2021.10.010DOI Listing

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