Abstract

Amoebophrya is part of an enigmatic, diverse, and ubiquitous marine alveolate lineage known almost entirely from anonymous environmental sequencing. Two cultured Amoebophrya strains grown on core dinoflagellate hosts were used for transcriptome sequencing. BLASTx using different genetic codes suggests that Amoebophyra sp. ex Karlodinium veneficum uses the three typical stop codons (UAA, UAG, and UGA) to encode amino acids. When UAA and UAG are translated as glutamine about half of the alignments have better BLASTx scores, and when UGA is translated as tryptophan one fifth have better scores. However, the sole stop codon appears to be UGA based on conserved genes, suggesting contingent translation of UGA. Neither host sequences, nor sequences from the second strain, Amoebophrya sp. ex Akashiwo sanguinea had similar results in BLASTx searches. A genome survey of Amoebophyra sp. ex K. veneficum showed no evidence for transcript editing aside from mitochondrial transcripts. The dynein heavy chain (DHC) gene family was surveyed and of 14 transcripts only two did not use UAA, UAG, or UGA in a coding context. Overall the transcriptome displayed strong bias for A or U in third codon positions, while the tRNA genome survey showed bias against codons ending in U, particularly for amino acids with two codons ending in either C or U. Together these clues suggest contingent translation mechanisms in Amoebophyra sp. ex K. veneficum and a phylogenetically distinct instance of genetic code modification.

Highlights

  • The genus Amoebophrya is part of a diverse, ubiquitous marine alveolate lineage, based on sequences from anonymous environmental clone libraries [1,2,3,4], yet the group contains few validly described species [5]

  • Transcriptome surveys from two distinct Amoebophrya strains cultured on the core dinoflagellate hosts, Karlodinium veneficum and Akashiwo sanguinea were previously used for phylogenetic analysis [6,7,8]

  • Increased scores indicated at least one site where UGA as tryptophan increased the pairwise alignment score, the results described in Fig 3 included all alignment positions where a UGA was present, including polar amino acids but not gaps

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Summary

Introduction

The genus Amoebophrya is part of a diverse, ubiquitous marine alveolate lineage, based on sequences from anonymous environmental clone libraries [1,2,3,4], yet the group contains few validly described species [5]. Transcriptome surveys from two distinct Amoebophrya strains cultured on the core dinoflagellate hosts, Karlodinium veneficum and Akashiwo sanguinea were previously used for phylogenetic analysis [6,7,8]. Knowing when to stop and National Science Foundation EF-0629624 to C.

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