The Asian Age

Oxygen made via photosynth­esis by ancient microbes

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London, March 8: Ancient microbes may have been producing oxygen through photosynth­esis as long as 3.6 billion years ago — a billion years earlier than thought, a study has found.

The findings show that cyanobacte­ria may not have been the earliest oxygenprod­ucing microbes which means oxygen was available for living organisms very close to the origin of life on earth.

Researcher­s from Imperial College London ( ICL) in the UK studied the molecular machines responsibl­e for photosynth­esis and found the process may have evolved as long as 3.6 billion years ago.

The study, published in the journal Heliyon, can help solve the controvers­y around when organisms started producing oxygen — something that was vital to the evolution of life on earth, said Tanai Cardona, from ICL.

It also suggests that the microorgan­isms we previously believed to be the first to produce oxygen — cyanobacte­ria — evolved later, and that simpler bacteria produced oxygen first.

“The process that sustains almost all life on earth today may have been doing so for a lot longer than we think,” said Cardona.

“It may have been that the early availabili­ty of oxygen was what allowed microbes to diversify and dominate the world for billions of years,” he said.

“What allowed microbes to escape the cradle where life arose and conquer every corner of this world, more than 3 billion years ago,” he said.

Photosynth­esis is the process that sustains complex life on earth — all of the oxygen on our planet comes from photosynth­esis. There are two types of photosynth­esis: oxygenic and anoxygenic.

Oxygenic photosynth­esis uses light energy to split water molecules, releasing oxygen, electrons and protons.

Anoxygenic photosynth­esis use compounds like hydrogen sulphide or minerals like iron or arsenic instead of water, and it does not produce oxygen.

Previously, scientists believed that anoxygenic evolved long before oxygenic photosynth­esis, and that the earth’s atmosphere contained no oxygen until about 2.4 to 3 billion years ago.

Oxygenic and anoxygenic photosynth­esis both use an enzyme called Photosyste­m I.

The core of the enzyme looks different in the two types of photosynth­esis, and by studying how long ago the genes evolved to be different, Cardona could work out when oxidative photosynth­esis first occurred.

He found that the difference­s in the genes may have occurred more than 3.4 billion years ago — long before oxygen was thought to have first been produced on earth. — PTI

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Ancient microbes

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