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Fossil cells with ‘tails’ may have been moving 3.4 billion years ago

Palaeontologists claim that early microorganisms may have moved under their own power using whip-like tails, but other researchers are sceptical
A transmission electron micrograph of a modern bacterium, Helicobacter pylori. This section shows a spherical body and several flagella
BIOMEDICAL IMAGING UNIT, SOUTHAM

Some of the earliest microorganisms may have been able to move around under their own power using whip-like “tails”, according to a study of fossils from 3.4 billion years ago. However, other palaeontologists say the evidence is weak – although they agree that the ability to move probably did evolve early.

The oldest confirmed fossils are 3.5 billion years old. They are all single-celled organisms like bacteria. Many researchers have claimed to have found older fossils, but none of these are widely accepted.

Researchers led by Frédéric Delarue at Sorbonne University in Paris, France, have now described a new collection of microfossils from the Strelley Pool Formation in Western Australia. The rocks in which they were found are 3.4 billion years old.

The cells are leaf-shaped and are 30 to 84 micrometres long, and about half that wide. The team dug them out by dissolving the surrounding rock using acid.

Such “microfossils” sometimes turn out to be peculiar rock formations, so the team performed a number of chemical tests to confirm that they are the remains of living organisms. “We observe nitrogen and phosphorus that are preserved in the fossils,” says team member Romain Tartèse at the University of Manchester in the UK – these are characteristic elements of life.

Abderrazak El Albani at the University of Poitiers in France says he is convinced the fossils are genuine. “It’s very good and very well documented,” he says.

But exactly what the fossils demonstrate is more controversial. A handful of the fossilised cells have a short rod sticking out at one end, which the team calls a “lash-like appendage”. “I have about 500 specimens,” says Delarue. Only four have the appendage. “Most of them lost it during geological history,” he says.

Delarue says these appendages could be the earliest evidence of an organism able to move by itself. They “were likely providing them with swimming capability”, he says. El Albani declined to comment on this aspect of the study.

Today, microorganisms use several different methods of locomotion. Many have a flagellum: a whip-like tail made of protein that rotates at high speed and powers the cell through water. Others move using tube-shaped prosthecae, which are extensions of their outer membrane.

Delarue and his colleagues argue that the microfossils’ appendages are similar and must also have been used to get around. “For me, it’s probably the finding of my life,” he says.

The researchers say they cannot be sure exactly what kind of appendage the cells had. “We probably have only a part of a locomotor organelle,” says Delarue. “We don’t know whether it was entirely preserved.”

The limited number of cells with lash-like appendages is a big problem, says Tanja Bosak at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. “It’s really hard to make too strong a conclusion.”

Bosak also points out that the appendages are much thicker than any known bacterial flagella. “There’s nothing we know of that really looks like this today,” she says. The team argues that the cells themselves are larger, meaning that the lash-like appendages are roughly the same relative size as a bacterial flagellum compared to a bacterium.

Mobility has obvious advantages, enabling microorganisms to move towards food supplies or light, so it may well have evolved early, says Bosak. “You just need proteins with certain properties,” she says. The problem is that organelles like flagella are fragile and would probably not preserve as fossils. It may be better to use genetics to estimate when the key genes responsible for mobility first evolved, says Bosak.

Reference: bioRxiv, DOI:

Topics: fossils