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  • Daye, Mirna; Klepac-Ceraj, Vanja; Pajusalu, Mihkel; Rowland, Sophie; Farrell-Sherman, Anna; Beukes, Nicolas; Tamura, Nobumichi; Fournier, Gregory; Bosak, Tanja

    Nature (London), 12/2019, Volume: 576, Issue: 7786
    Journal Article

    Oxygenic photosynthesis supplies organic carbon to the modern biosphere, but it is uncertain when this metabolism originated. It has previously been proposed that photosynthetic reaction centres capable of splitting water arose by about 3 billion years ago on the basis of the inferred presence of manganese oxides in Archaean sedimentary rocks. However, this assumes that manganese oxides can be produced only in the presence of molecular oxygen , reactive oxygen species or by high-potential photosynthetic reaction centres . Here we show that communities of anoxygenic photosynthetic microorganisms biomineralize manganese oxides in the absence of molecular oxygen and high-potential photosynthetic reaction centres. Microbial oxidation of Mn(II) under strictly anaerobic conditions during the Archaean eon would have produced geochemical signals identical to those used to date the evolution of oxygenic photosynthesis before the Great Oxidation Event . This light-dependent process may also produce manganese oxides in the photic zones of modern anoxic water bodies and sediments.