4.3 Article

Tracing the Early Emergence of Microbial Sulfur Metabolisms

Journal

GEOMICROBIOLOGY JOURNAL
Volume 38, Issue 1, Pages 66-86

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS INC
DOI: 10.1080/01490451.2020.1812773

Keywords

Archean; mass-independent fractionation; microbial evolution; Sulfur isotopes

Funding

  1. Department of Evolutionary Biology of the University of Colorado
  2. Collaborative for Research in Origins (CRiO)
  3. John Templeton Foundation [54466]

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Hydrogen sulfide and sulfur oxide gases underwent gas-phase chemical transformations in the early Earth's globally anoxic atmosphere, producing elemental sulfur aerosols that rained into sulfate-deficient Archean oceans to form sedimentary sulfides. These aerosols may have also fueled microbial sulfur metabolisms and can be traced by sulfur isotopes.
Hydrogen sulfide (nH(2)S) and sulfur oxide (SOn;n = 1, 2, 3) gases in early Earth's globally anoxic atmosphere were subjected to gas-phase chemical transformations by UV light. A principal photolysis pathway at that time produced elemental sulfur aerosols with mass-independently fractionated (MIF) isotopic values carrying variable minor isotope (S-33,S-36) compositions. These rained into the sulfate-deficient Archean (ca. 3.85-2.5 Ga) oceans to react with [Fe2+](aq)and form sedimentary sulfides. The MIF-bearing sulfides were incorporated into Archean sediments, including banded iron formations (BIF). Such aerosols may also have fueled microbial sulfur metabolisms, and thus are traceable by the MIF sulfur isotopes. Yet, data show that before similar to 3.5 Ga mass-dependent(34)S/S-32 values in Early Archean sediments tend to fall within a narrow (+/- 0.1%) range even as they carrymass-independentvalues. By about 3.5 Ga,S-34/S-32 values show much greater changes (>1%) in range congruent with microbial metabolic processing. Here, we trace probable pathways of elemental sulfur aerosols into Archean sediments, and couple our study with analysis of the evolutionary relationships of enzymes involved in sulfur metabolism to explain the observed trends. Our model explains why elemental sulfur aerosols were apparently not utilized by the Eoarchean (pre-3.65 Ga) biosphere even though an immediate precursor to the required enzyme may have already been present.

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