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Review
. 2025 Jan;23(1):41-56.
doi: 10.1038/s41579-024-01088-0. Epub 2024 Aug 28.

Terrabacteria: redefining bacterial envelope diversity, biogenesis and evolution

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Free article
Review

Terrabacteria: redefining bacterial envelope diversity, biogenesis and evolution

Basile Beaud Benyahia et al. Nat Rev Microbiol. 2025 Jan.
Free article

Abstract

The bacterial envelope is one of the oldest and most essential cellular components and has been traditionally divided into Gram-positive (monoderm) and Gram-negative (diderm). Recent landmark studies have challenged a major paradigm in microbiology by inferring that the last bacterial common ancestor had a diderm envelope and that the outer membrane (OM) was lost repeatedly in evolution to give rise to monoderms. Intriguingly, OM losses appear to have occurred exclusively in the Terrabacteria, one of the two major clades of bacteria. In this Review, we present current knowledge about the Terrabacteria. We describe their diversity and phylogeny and then highlight the vast phenotypic diversity of the Terrabacteria cell envelopes, which display large deviations from the textbook examples of diderms and monoderms, challenging the classical Gram-positive-Gram-negative divide. We highlight the striking differences in the systems involved in OM biogenesis in Terrabacteria with respect to the classical diderm experimental models and how they provide novel insights into the diversity and biogenesis of the bacterial cell envelope. We also discuss the potential evolutionary steps that might have led to the multiple losses of the OM and speculate on how the very first OM might have emerged before the last bacterial common ancestor.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: The authors declare no competing interests.

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