
Carbon isotope evidence for the global physiology of Proterozoic cyanobacteria
Author(s) -
Stephanie E. Hurley,
Boswell A. Wing,
C. E. Jasper,
N. C. W. Hill,
Jeffrey C. Cameron
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
science advances
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 5.928
H-Index - 146
ISSN - 2375-2548
DOI - 10.1126/sciadv.abc8998
Subject(s) - proterozoic , cyanobacteria , isotopes of carbon , carbon fixation , isotope fractionation , stromatolite , geology , carbon cycle , photosynthesis , environmental chemistry , paleontology , fractionation , carbonate , botany , chemistry , biology , ecology , ecosystem , total organic carbon , bacteria , tectonics , organic chemistry
Ancestral cyanobacteria are assumed to be prominent primary producers after the Great Oxidation Event [≈2.4 to 2.0 billion years (Ga) ago], but carbon isotope fractionation by extant marine cyanobacteria (α-cyanobacteria) is inconsistent with isotopic records of carbon fixation by primary producers in the mid-Proterozoic eon (1.8 to 1.0 Ga ago). To resolve this disagreement, we quantified carbon isotope fractionation by a wild-type planktic β-cyanobacterium ( Synechococcus sp. PCC 7002), an engineered Proterozoic analog lacking a CO 2 -concentrating mechanism, and cyanobacterial mats. At mid-Proterozoic pH and p CO 2 values, carbon isotope fractionation by the wild-type β-cyanobacterium is fully consistent with the Proterozoic carbon isotope record, suggesting that cyanobacteria with CO 2 -concentrating mechanisms were apparently the major primary producers in the pelagic Proterozoic ocean, despite atmospheric CO 2 levels up to 100 times modern. The selectively permeable microcompartments central to cyanobacterial CO 2 -concentrating mechanisms ("carboxysomes") likely emerged to shield rubisco from O 2 during the Great Oxidation Event.