The origin and distribution of nitrogen fixation has been perplexing from a phylogenetic perspective, largely because of factors that confound molecular phylogeny such as sequencedivergence, paralogy, and horizontal gene transfer. Recently, we made use of 110 publicly availablecomplete genome sequences to understand how the core components of nitrogenase, including NifH, NifD, NifK, NifE, and NifN proteins, have evolved (15) (Fig. 7). These genes are universal in nitrogen fixing organisms—typically found within highly conserved operons—and overall have remarkably congruent phylogenetic histories. Additional clues to the early origins of this system are available from two distinct clades of nitrogenase paralogs: a group composed of genes essential to photosynthetic pigment biosynthesis and a group of uncharacterized genes present in methanogens and in some photosynthetic bacteria. We have explored the complex genetic history of the nitrogenase family, which is replete with gene duplication, recruitment, fusion, and horizontal gene transfer and discuss these events in light of the hypothesized presence of nitrogenase in the last common ancestor of modern organisms, as well as the additional possibility that nitrogen fixation might have evolved later, perhaps in methanogenic archaea, and was subsequently transferred into the bacterial domain. Recent work has centered on expression and characterization of the group V pigment biosynthesis and the newly discovered group IV uncharacterized nitrogenase homologs (16).

Figure 7: Molecular evolution of nitrogenase and other Nic-Like proteins (13).