Iron as an integral constituent of ancient metabolism and biochemistry
Microbiology;Biochemistry;Origin of life;Iron
Bray, Marcus Salvatore ; Glass, Jennifer B. Williams, Loren D. Biology Kostka, Joel E. Stewart, Frank J. Konstantinidis, Kostas T. ; Glass, Jennifer B.
Life on Earth evolved and proliferated for nearly 2 billion years in an environment devoid of molecular oxygen and replete with iron. Currently on Earth, iron has widespread uses in the biochemistry and metabolism of extant organisms. It is therefore likely that this metal filled a larger role at life’s inception and colonization across the planet. In this dissertation, I investigated the roles that iron could have played for early lifeforms and early biochemistry. I first studied iron’s ability to substitute for magnesium in life’s oldest macromolecular machine, the ribosome. I found that under conditions reminiscent of the ancient Earth, iron can mediate ribosomal structure and function in place of magnesium, both in vitro and in vivo. I then examined the mechanisms microorganisms use to respire iron, and the how this ancient metabolism interacts with others in the environment. I found that certain iron reducing strategies may me more phylogenetically and structurally diverse than previously realized, and that the competing interest of iron reducing organisms with methanogens in sediments could have constrained early planetary habitability. Collectively, my results deepen our knowledge of not only the past, but present and future of iron in life on this planet.
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Iron as an integral constituent of ancient metabolism and biochemistry