Abstract

Paulinella micropora is a rhizarian thecate amoeba, belonging to a photosynthetic Paulinella species group that has a unique organelle termed chromatophore, whose cyanobacterial origin is distinct from that of plant and algal chloroplasts. Because acquisition of the chromatophore was quite a recent event compared with that of the chloroplast ancestor, the Paulinella species are thought to be model organisms for studying the early process of primary endosymbiosis. To obtain insight into how endosymbiotically transferred genes acquire expression competence in the host nucleus, here we analyzed the 5′ end sequences of the mRNAs of P. micropora MYN1 strain with the aid of a cap-trapper cDNA library. As a result, we found that mRNAs of 27 genes, including endosymbiotically transferred genes, possessed the common 5′ end sequence of 28–33 bases that were posttranscriptionally added by spliced leader (SL) trans-splicing. We also found two subtypes of SL RNA genes encoded by the P. micropora MYN1 genome. Differing from the other SL trans-splicing organisms that usually possess poly(A)-less SL RNAs, this amoeba has polyadenylated SL RNAs. In this study, we characterize the SL trans-splicing of this unique organism and discuss the putative merits of SL trans-splicing in functional gene transfer and genome evolution.

Highlights

  • Splice leader (SL) trans-splicing is an RNA maturation process that adds a short leader sequence of 16–52 bases to the 50 end of precursor mRNAs [1]

  • We found that the nuclear genes of P. micropora MYN1, including those derived from endosymbiotic gene transfer (EGT), are at least in part subjected to SL trans-splicing, as implicated in P. chromatophora [27]

  • Detection of SL trans-splicing in P. micropora MYN1

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Summary

Introduction

Splice leader (SL) trans-splicing is an RNA maturation process that adds a short leader sequence of 16–52 bases to the 50 end of precursor mRNAs [1]. SL snRNP carries SL RNA to the 50 end of the recipient precursor mRNAs [5, 12].

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