A brief history of metal recruitment in protozoan predation

Research output: Contribution to journalReviewResearchpeer-review

  • Yanshuang Yu
  • Yuan Ping Li
  • Kexin Ren
  • Xiuli Hao
  • Ernest Chi Fru
  • Rønn, Regin
  • Windell L. Rivera
  • Karsten Becker
  • Renwei Feng
  • Jun Yang
  • Christopher Rensing

Metals and metalloids are used as weapons for predatory feeding by unicellular eukaryotes on prokaryotes. This review emphasizes the role of metal(loid) bioavailability over the course of Earth's history, coupled with eukaryogenesis and the evolution of the mitochondrion to trace the emergence and use of the metal(loid) prey-killing phagosome as a feeding strategy. Members of the genera Acanthamoeba and Dictyostelium use metals such as zinc (Zn) and copper (Cu), and possibly metalloids, to kill their bacterial prey after phagocytosis. We provide a potential timeline on when these capacities first evolved and how they correlate with perceived changes in metal(loid) bioavailability through Earth's history. The origin of phagotrophic eukaryotes must have postdated the Great Oxidation Event (GOE) in agreement with redox-dependent modification of metal(loid) bioavailability for phagotrophic poisoning. However, this predatory mechanism is predicted to have evolved much later – closer to the origin of the multicellular metazoans and the evolutionary development of the immune systems.

Original languageEnglish
JournalTrends in Microbiology
ISSN0966-842X
DOIs
Publication statusE-pub ahead of print - 2023

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© 2023 Elsevier Ltd

    Research areas

  • arsenic, copper, predation, protist, zinc

ID: 377834422