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From Asgard to Earth: Small Finds Unlock Secrets of Life’s Biggest Leap

April 9, 2026
in Biology
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From Asgard to Earth: Small Finds Unlock Secrets of Life’s Biggest Leap
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Stromatolites, often mistaken for inert, ancient rock formations, are in fact living, intricate microbial cities that have persisted for billions of years on Earth. These layered microbial mats represent some of the very earliest life forms that profoundly influenced our planet’s atmosphere by producing the first molecular oxygen, setting the stage for all complex life that would follow. A new study published in Current Biology unveils groundbreaking insights into how such primitive microbial communities may have been pivotal in the evolutionary leap from simple cells to the complex eukaryotic cells that constitute plants, animals, and humans today.

In this landmark research, Associate Professor Brendan Burns and his team from UNSW Sydney, alongside collaborators from the University of Technology Sydney and The University of Melbourne, have uncovered an unprecedented microbe residing within modern stromatolites in Shark Bay, Western Australia. This microbe belongs to the enigmatic Asgard archaea, a group posited as the closest living relatives to the ancestors of all eukaryotic life. Despite their microscopic scale, Asgard archaea hold extraordinary significance as they represent an evolutionary bridge, offering clues to how individual prokaryotic cells might have started collaborating, setting in motion the emergence of cellular complexity.

One central biological hypothesis posits that the first eukaryotic cell arose from a symbiotic event in which an archaeon and a bacterium began an intimate association, culminating in one engulfing the other. This event resulted in the formation of mitochondria, the cellular powerhouses defining eukaryotic life. Until now, the visual and physical evidence capturing these early partnerships was notably absent. However, this study presents the first direct imagery showing an Asgard archaeon physically connected to a bacterium through ultrafine, tube-like structures called nanotubes, suggesting a tangible model of how early symbioses might have arisen.

The journey to these discoveries was arduous, involving more than four years of painstaking laboratory cultivation and optimization. Asgard archaea are notoriously challenging to culture outside their native environments, compelling the team to develop novel techniques to observe these elusive microbes in situ rather than in isolation. The inability to grow these archaea in pure cultures underscores the possible obligate symbiotic nature of these organisms; their survival likely hinges on complex metabolic exchanges with neighboring microbes, a factor that may have been critical in early evolutionary history.

Cutting-edge electron cryotomography was pivotal to this breakthrough, enabling the researchers to visualize cell structures at nanometer resolution in three dimensions without chemical fixation or staining that could disrupt delicate membranes and interactions. Through this high-precision imaging, the team discerned that the archaeon not only connected via nanotubes but also produced elaborate budded vesicles and tubular appendages. Biochemical analyses revealed that these microbes exchanged essential compounds, including vitamins, nutrients, and hydrogen gas, indicating a sophisticated metabolic interdependence reminiscent of early cooperative interactions that could have fostered eukaryotic origins.

Coauthor Associate Professor Debnath Ghosal from The University of Melbourne highlights the significance of capturing this microbe interaction as a tangible step closer to unraveling the mysterious evolutionary transition from simple to complex cells. This capture provides a critical piece of the puzzle, refining our understanding of how primordial microbial partnerships may have operated and evolved over geological timeframes.

Furthermore, the integration of artificial intelligence and deep learning in protein structure prediction played an instrumental role in the study. Associate Professor Kate Mitchie from UNSW Sydney elaborates on how machine learning algorithms facilitated the identification of ancestral versions of cellular machinery proteins, deepening insight into the evolutionary conservation of molecular components essential for eukaryotic life. This frontier of combining advanced computational biology with cutting-edge microscopy is unveiling a more coherent narrative of the cellular evolution that once seemed intangible.

The ecological context of this discovery is equally profound. The microbial ecosystems of Shark Bay act as modern analogues for ancient microbial mats, living time capsules preserving evolutionary relics. The researchers named the newly characterized archaeon Nerearchaeum marumarumayae, drawing on both Greek mythology and the Malgana language of the region’s Indigenous people, whose millennia-old stewardship of the land is interwoven with the natural history preserved in these mats. This cross-disciplinary collaboration highlights respect for cultural heritage alongside scientific inquiry.

In the harsh, fluctuating conditions within microbial mats, such interdependent microbial partnerships would have been essential survival strategies. A/Prof. Burns reflects on archaea not merely as independent organisms but as cooperative ‘companions’ thriving through metabolic exchange and physical connectivity. This microcosm of cooperation echoes through time, illuminating mechanisms that may have underpinned the complex symbiotic relationships fundamental to multicellular and eukaryotic life.

The prolonged, patient collaboration among researchers and graduate students from multiple Australian institutions emphasizes the collective effort required to unravel such complex biological phenomena. Moreover, these fragile microbial ecosystems face unprecedented threats from climate change and anthropogenic activities, underscoring an urgent need for conservation efforts to protect these living archives of Earth’s evolutionary past.

Ultimately, this study reveals not just an extraordinary microbiological relationship but also a profound evolutionary narrative: the origins of complex life are rooted in cooperation at the smallest scales. These microscopic archaeal ‘building blocks’ serve as living reminders that life’s history is a story of connection, resilience, and interdependence—lessons deeply relevant in today’s rapidly changing world.


Subject of Research: Microbial interactions and evolution of complex life through Asgard archaea in stromatolites.

Article Title: An Asgard archaeon from a modern analogue of ancient microbial mats

News Publication Date: 9-Apr-2026

Web References: DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2026.03.041

Image Credits: Image: Iain Duggin, Debnath Ghosal, Brendan Burns

Keywords: Microorganisms, Archaea, Bacteria, Prokaryotes, Cell biology, Eukaryotic cells

Tags: ancient microbial communitiesAsgard archaea significanceBrendan Burns UNSW studycomplex cell emergenceearliest life forms on Eartheukaryotic cell originsevolutionary biology researchmicrobial city ecosystemsmicrobial evolution Shark Baymolecular oxygen production evolutionprokaryotic to eukaryotic transitionstromatolites microbial mats
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