Department of Ecology and Ecosystem Modelling, University of Potsdam, Potsdam, Germany.
PLoS One. 2009 Dec 29;4(12):e8465. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0008465.
The loss of photosynthesis has occurred often in eukaryotic evolution, even more than its acquisition, which occurred at least nine times independently and which generated the evolution of the supergroups Archaeplastida, Rhizaria, Chromalveolata and Excavata. This secondary loss of autotrophic capability is essential to explain the evolution of eukaryotes and the high diversity of protists, which has been severely underestimated until recently. However, the ecological and evolutionary scenarios behind this evolutionary "step back" are still largely unknown.
METHODOLOGY/PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Using a dynamic model of heterotrophic and mixotrophic flagellates and two types of prey, large bacteria and ultramicrobacteria, we examine the influence of DOC concentration, mixotroph's photosynthetic growth rate, and external limitations of photosynthesis on the coexistence of both types of flagellates. Our key premises are: large bacteria grow faster than small ones at high DOC concentrations, and vice versa; and heterotrophic flagellates are more efficient than the mixotrophs grazing small bacteria (both empirically supported). We show that differential efficiency in bacteria grazing, which strongly depends on cell size, is a key factor to explain the loss of photosynthesis in mixotrophs (which combine photosynthesis and bacterivory) leading to purely heterotrophic lineages. Further, we show in what conditions an heterotroph mutant can coexist, or even out-compete, its mixotrophic ancestor, suggesting that bacterivory and cell size reduction may have been major triggers for the diversification of eukaryotes.
CONCLUSIONS/SIGNIFICANCE: Our results suggest that, provided the mixotroph's photosynthetic advantage is not too large, the (small) heterotroph will also dominate in nutrient-poor environments and will readily invade a community of mixotrophs and bacteria, due to its higher efficiency exploiting the ultramicrobacteria. As carbon-limited conditions were presumably widespread throughout Earth history, such a scenario may explain the numerous transitions from phototrophy to mixotrophy and further to heterotrophy within virtually all major algal lineages. We challenge prevailing concepts that affiliated the evolution of phagotrophy with eutrophic or strongly light-limited environments only.
光合作用的丧失在真核生物进化中经常发生,甚至比其获得更为常见,光合作用至少独立发生了九次,产生了超群古菌、根肿菌门、不等鞭毛门和吞噬体。这种自主光合作用能力的二次丧失对于解释真核生物的进化和原生生物的高度多样性至关重要,直到最近,这些多样性才被严重低估。然而,这种进化“倒退”背后的生态和进化情景在很大程度上仍然未知。
方法/主要发现:我们使用异养和混合营养鞭毛虫的动态模型和两种类型的猎物,即大型细菌和超微细菌,研究了 DOC 浓度、混合营养体的光合作用生长率以及光合作用的外部限制对两种鞭毛虫共存的影响。我们的主要前提是:在高 DOC 浓度下,大型细菌比小型细菌生长得更快,反之亦然;异养鞭毛虫比混合营养体捕食小型细菌的效率更高(这两个前提都得到了经验支持)。我们表明,在细菌摄食方面的差异效率,这强烈依赖于细胞大小,是解释混合营养体(将光合作用和细菌摄食结合起来)丧失光合作用导致纯粹异养谱系的关键因素。此外,我们展示了在什么条件下,一个异养突变体可以共存,甚至可以竞争过它的混合营养体祖先,这表明细菌摄食和细胞大小的减小可能是真核生物多样化的主要触发因素。
结论/意义:我们的研究结果表明,只要混合营养体的光合作用优势不是太大,那么在营养贫乏的环境中,(较小的)异养体也将占据主导地位,并且由于其对超微细菌的更高效率利用,它将很容易入侵一个混合营养体和细菌的群落。由于在地球历史上,碳限制条件可能普遍存在,因此这种情景可能解释了几乎所有主要藻类谱系中从光合作用到混合营养体再到异养体的众多转变。我们挑战了这样一种普遍观点,即吞噬作用的进化仅与富营养或强烈光限制的环境有关。