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Chimeric origins and dynamic evolution of central carbon metabolism in eukaryotes

Carlos Santana-Molina, Tom A. Williams, Berend Snel, Anja Spang

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Abstract

The origin of eukaryotes was a key event in the history of life. Current leading hypotheses propose that a symbiosis between an asgardarchaeal host cell and an alphaproteobacterial endosymbiont represented a crucial step in eukaryotic origin and that metabolic cross-feeding between the partners provided the basis for their subsequent evolutionary integration. A major unanswered question is whether the metabolism of modern eukaryotes bears any vestige of this ancestral syntrophy. Here we systematically analyse the evolutionary origins of the eukaryotic gene repertoires mediating central carbon metabolism. Our phylogenetic and sequence analyses reveal that this gene repertoire is chimeric, with ancestral contributions from Asgardarchaeota and Alphaproteobacteria operating predominantly in glycolysis and the tricarboxylic acid cycle, respectively. Our analyses also reveal the extent to which this ancestral metabolic interplay has been remodelled via gene loss, transfer and subcellular retargeting in the >2 billion years since the origin of eukaryotic cells, and we identify genetic contributions from other prokaryotic sources in addition to the asgardarchaeal host and alphaproteobacterial endosymbiont. Our work demonstrates that, in contrast to previous assumptions, modern eukaryotic metabolism preserves information about the nature of the original asgardarchaeal–alphaproteobacterial interactions and supports syntrophy scenarios for the origin of the eukaryotic cell.
Original languageEnglish
Article number7456
Pages (from-to)613-627
Number of pages15
JournalNature Ecology & Evolution
Volume9
Issue number4
Early online date3 Mar 2025
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 1 Apr 2025

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© The Author(s) 2025.

Acknowledgements

We want to thank C. Stairs, N. Dombrowski, M. Raas, S. Tzavellas and D. Tamarit for helpful discussions on eukaryotic and archaeal/bacterial taxon selection, redundancy filtering, intron analysis and phylogenetic analyses, respectively.

Funding

A.S. and B.S. have received support from an initiative of Utrecht University (UU) to foster collaborations between UU and NIOZ (NZ4543.11: \u2018The origin and diversification of eukaryotic metabolisms\u2019 to A.S. and B.S.) and thank additional collaboration partners of this project, E. J. Javaux, P. Mason and R. Hennekam. A.S. has received funding from the European Research Council under the European Union Horizon 2020 research and innovation programme (grant agreement no. 947317, ASymbEL to A.S.), the Moore\u2013Simons Project on the Origin of the Eukaryotic Cell, Simons Foundation 735929LPI (https://doi.org/10.46714/735929LPI to A.S. and co-principal investigators). T.A.W. and A.S. have received funding from the Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation (grant no. GBMF9741 to T.A.W., A.S. and co-principal investigators). We want to thank C. Stairs, N. Dombrowski, M. Raas, S. Tzavellas and D. Tamarit for helpful discussions on eukaryotic and archaeal/bacterial taxon selection, redundancy filtering, intron analysis and phylogenetic analyses, respectively.

FundersFunder number
Simons Foundation 735929LPI
Universiteit Utrecht
Moore–Simons
European Research Council
Koninklijk Nederlands Instituut voor Onderzoek der ZeeNZ4543.11
Horizon 2020947317
Gordon and Betty Moore FoundationGBMF9741

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