Nitrogen inputs in the ancient ocean

Nitrogen inputs in the ancient ocean
Purple sulfur bacteria in freshwater Lake Cadagno (upper panels, in green and purple), and their single-cell nitrogen fixation activity measured with nanoSIMS (lower panels, warm colors indicate high activity). Credit: Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology/M. Philippi

It was long assumed that cyanobacteria were mainly responsible for fixing nitrogen on early Earth, thus making nitrogen available to the biosphere. Researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen, Germany, now show that purple sulfur bacteria could have contributed substantially to nitrogen fixation under the conditions prevailing in the Proterozoic ocean.

Nitrogen is vital for all forms of life: It is part of proteins, nucleic acids and other cell structures. Thus, it was of great importance for the development of life on early Earth to be able to convert gaseous dinitrogen from the atmosphere into a bio-available form—ammonium. However, it has not yet been clarified who carried out this so-called nitrogen fixation on early Earth and with the help of which enzyme. Now, researchers at the Max Planck Institute for Marine Microbiology in Bremen have shown that under similarly barren conditions as in the Proterozoic , a previously underappreciated group of can fix nitrogen very efficiently.

A "small Proterozoic ocean" in the Swiss Alps

Since the Proterozoic ocean can hardly be studied directly, the researchers Miriam Philippi and Katharina Kitzinger from the Max Planck Institute in Bremen and colleagues substituted it with a comparable modern-day habitat: The alpine Lake Cadagno in Switzerland. Unlike most other lakes, Lake Cadagno is permanently stratified, meaning that the upper and lower water layers do not mix.

Purple bacteria inhabit the transition zone between the upper, oxygenated layer and the lower, oxygen-free and sulfidic layer. There, they carry out photosynthesis and oxidize sulfur. "The discovery of fossils of this group of microorganisms shows that they already lived on our planet at least 1.6 billion years ago, during the Proterozoic eon," said Philippi, first author of the study. "Hence, this and these bacteria represent a system that resembles the Proterozoic ocean in many aspects." Therefore, it is so well-suited for learning more about the processes on early Earth.

Nitrogen inputs in the ancient ocean
Salty springs at the lake bottom prevent mixing, resulting in a stable stratification. The upper meters contain oxygen but little nutrients. The lower layer is anoxic and rich in sulfide, creating a stable intermediate layer with steep concentration gradients of oxygen and sulfide. Here, the purple sulfur bacteria use solar energy to oxidize sulfide – and fix nitrogen. Credit: Miriam Philippi

Purple sulfur bacteria fix nitrogen

Using a combination of biogeochemical and molecular analyses, Philippi and colleagues discovered that the purple sulfur bacteria in Lake Cadagno fix nitrogen very efficiently. Nitrogen fixation is the conversion of nitrogen gas, which is not very reactive, into nitrogen compounds that many organisms can use, for example algae. "To our knowledge, this is the first direct evidence of nitrogen fixation by purple sulfur bacteria in nature," explained co-author Katharina Kitzinger.

"We discovered that they use the most common enzyme in present-day, molybdenum nitrogenase, to do so. Although this enzyme is not rare, we were very surprised to find it in Lake Cadagno." This is because there is only very little molybdenum in the water—just as in the Proterozoic ocean, which has led researchers to believe that non-molybdenum nitrogenases prevailed on early Earth. "Now we know that molybdenum nitrogenase works very efficiently, even at low molybdenum concentrations."

"We thus provide the first indication that purple sulfur bacteria may have been partly responsible for fixation in the Proterozoic ocean," Philippi continued. "Until now, it was generally assumed that cyanobacteria carried out most of the then. We show that the role of purple sulfur bacteria in this process was likely underestimated."

The study is published in Nature Communications.

More information: Miriam Philippi et al, Purple sulfur bacteria fix N2 via molybdenum-nitrogenase in a low molybdenum Proterozoic ocean analogue, Nature Communications (2021). DOI: 10.1038/s41467-021-25000-z

Journal information: Nature Communications

Provided by Max Planck Society

Citation: Nitrogen inputs in the ancient ocean (2021, August 6) retrieved 20 June 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2021-08-nitrogen-ancient-ocean.html
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