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Identification of one of the first multicellular algae thanks to its chlorophyll fossilized for 1 billion years

01.11.22 | University of Liège

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Researchers from the Early Life Traces & Evolution Laboratory (Astrobiology / Faculty of Science) at the University of Liège have discovered the first in-situ evidence of chlorophyll remnants in a billion-year-old multicellular algal microfossil preserved in shales from the Congo Basin. This discovery, which is the subject of a paper published in the journal Nature Communications , has made it possible to unambiguously identify one of the first phototrophic eukaryotic organisms in the fossil record. This research opens up new perspectives in the study of the diversification of eukaryotes within the first ecosystems.

The emergence of photosynthesis is a fundamental step in the evolution of eukaryotes and therefore of life, as it has profoundly modified terrestrial ecosystems. Although molecular clocks (a technique used by biologists to date the temporal distance between two species from their common ancestor) predict this emergence during the Proterozoic (third Precambrian eon from -2.5 billion to -541 million years ago), scientists have found very few unambiguous microfossils of photosynthetic eukaryotes. The detection of metabolic by-products in situ in individual microfossils is the key to the direct identification of their metabolisms, but until now it has remained elusive.

A new scientific study conducted on Congo Basin fossils by Marie Catherine Sforna , a postdoctoral researcher at the Early Traces of Life Laborator y ( ASTROBIOLOGY Research Unit / Faculty of Science ) of the ULiège University, directed by Prof. Emmanuelle Javaux , has just provided a new methodology using fluorescence and synchrotron X-ray absorption to identify the phototrophic metabolism (relating to living organisms that derive their energy from light) of the first eukaryotes in the fossil record. Fossils preserved as carbonaceous compressions in shales from the Congo Basin in the Democratic Republic of Congo.

With collaborators from the Australian National University (Australia), the Commission for the Geological map of the world (France), the Swiss Light Source (Switzerland), the Synchrotron Soleil (France), the University of Lille (France), the UR FOCUS (Liège) and the Royal Museum for Central Africa (Belgium) researchers from the University of Liège have identified nickel-geoporphyrins, preserved in situ in the cells of a multicellular eukaryote that is about one billion years old: Arctacellularia tetragonala . " We identified these fragments as chlorophyll derivatives, indicating that Arctacellularia tetragonala was a phototrophic eukaryote, one of the first unambiguous algae, " explains Marie-Catherine Sforna. This new methodology, applicable to billion-year-old supermature rocks, provides a new approach to understanding the evolution of eukaryotic phototrophy during the Precambrian and the diversification of primary producers in early ecosystems.

Scientific reference

Sforna Marie Catherine 1 , Loron Corentin C. 1 Demoulin Catherine F. 1 François Camille 1,2 , Cornet Yohan 1 , Lara Yannick J. 1 Grolimund Daniel 3 , Ferreira Sanchez Dario 3 , Medjoubi Kadda 4 , Somogyi Andrea 4 , Addad Ahmed 5 , Fadel Alexandre 5 , Compère Philippe 6 , Baudet Daniel 7 , Brocks Jochen J. 8 & Javaux Emmanuelle J. 1, Intracellular bound chlorophyll residues identify 1 Gyr-old fossils as eukaryotic algae , Nature Communications , doi 10.1038/s41467-021-27810-7

1 Early Life Traces & Evolution-Astrobiology, UR Astrobiology, University of Liege, Liege, Belgium

²Commission for the Geological Map of the World, Paris, France

3 Paul Scherrer Institut, Swiss Light Source, CH-5232 Villigen PSI, Switzerland

4 Synchrotron Soleil, Saint-Aubin - BP 48, France

5 Materials and Transformations Unit (UMR CNRS 8207), University Lille 1 - Sciences and Technologies, Villeneuve d'Ascq, France

6 Functional and Evolutive Morphology, Department of Biology, Ecology and Evolution, UR FOCUS, and Center for Applied Research and Education in Microscopy (CAREM-ULiege), University of Liege, Liege, Belgium

7 Geodynamics & Mineral Resources Service, Royal Museum for Central Africa, Belgium

8 Research School of Earth Sciences, The Australian National University, Canberra, ACT, Australia

Funding sources: Marie-Curie Cofund programme at the University of Liege; FNRS CR PROMESS project, FRS-FNRS-FWO EOS ET-Home, ERC Stg ELiTE, BELSPO BRAIN PORTAL project, and CALYPSO PLUS programme (Synchrotron Soleil).

Nature Communications

10.1038/s41467-021-27810-7

Intracellular bound chlorophyll residues identify 1 Gyr-old fossils as eukaryotic algae

12-Jan-2022

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Contact Information

Didier Moreau
University of Liege
dmoreau@ulg.ac.be

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How to Cite This Article

APA:
University of Liège. (2022, January 11). Identification of one of the first multicellular algae thanks to its chlorophyll fossilized for 1 billion years. Brightsurf News. https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LQ44P0K8/identification-of-one-of-the-first-multicellular-algae-thanks-to-its-chlorophyll-fossilized-for-1-billion-years.html
MLA:
"Identification of one of the first multicellular algae thanks to its chlorophyll fossilized for 1 billion years." Brightsurf News, Jan. 11 2022, https://www.brightsurf.com/news/LQ44P0K8/identification-of-one-of-the-first-multicellular-algae-thanks-to-its-chlorophyll-fossilized-for-1-billion-years.html.