Anaerobic ammonium-oxidation (anammox) is a typical redox reaction driven by membrane electron transformation. However, the electron transfer mechanism of the core redox reaction and its evolutionary origins are still not thoroughly identified. In this study, a preliminary analys
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Anaerobic ammonium-oxidation (anammox) is a typical redox reaction driven by membrane electron transformation. However, the electron transfer mechanism of the core redox reaction and its evolutionary origins are still not thoroughly identified. In this study, a preliminary analysis was conducted for such interaction based on the 64 anammox bacterial genomes representing 12 genera available currently. The results suggested that enzymes involved in anammox reaction share the similar catalytic and electron transfer modes in different lineages, while the electron-carrying proteins shuttled between membrane and soluble enzymes are very different. A comparatively simple electronic shuttle protein system was encoded in the early-branching groundwater lineages Candidatus (Ca.) Avalokitesvara and Ca. Tripitaka, which was replaced by a sophisticated electron carrier scheme in the late-branching marine and terrestrial groups within family Ca. Brocadiaceae. Remarkably, the increasing availability of nitrite after Great Oxidation Event (GOE) potentially drove the adaptive evolution of the core redox systems by successively recruiting the nitrite reductase (NIR) for nitrite balance, a stable complex of two small cytochrome c proteins (NaxL and NaxS homologues) for electron transfer to HZS, as well as optimizing the structure of nitrite oxidoreductase gamma (NxrC) for electron conservation. In particular, a tubule-inducing nitrite oxidoreductase subunit (NxrT homologue) was further formed for electron transformation after the Neoproterozoic Oxygenation Event (NOE). Finally, based on two full-scale anammox-based wastewater treatment systems (WWTPs), we identified core gene transcriptional activities affecting the abundance of the family Ca. Brocadiaceae and their association with environmental factors. Overall, our study not only provides key information for understanding the dynamic patterns and evolutionary mechanisms of the anammox reactions and the associated electron transfers in conjunction with major geological events, but also provides new insights for future enrichment and effective applications.