Abstract

BackgroundCryptophytes are an ecologically important group of algae comprised of phototrophic, heterotrophic and osmotrophic species. This lineage is of great interest to evolutionary biologists because their plastids are of red algal secondary endosymbiotic origin. Cryptophytes have a clear phylogenetic affinity to heterotrophic eukaryotes and possess four genomes: host-derived nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, and plastid and nucleomorph genomes of endosymbiotic origin.ResultsTo gain insight into cryptophyte mitochondrial genome evolution, we sequenced the mitochondrial DNAs of five species and performed a comparative analysis of seven genomes from the following cryptophyte genera: Chroomonas, Cryptomonas, Hemiselmis, Proteomonas, Rhodomonas, Storeatula and Teleaulax. The mitochondrial genomes were similar in terms of their general architecture, gene content and presence of a large repeat region. However, gene order was poorly conserved. Characteristic features of cryptophyte mtDNAs included large syntenic clusters resembling α-proteobacterial operons that encode bacteria-like rRNAs, tRNAs, and ribosomal protein genes. The cryptophyte mitochondrial genomes retain almost all genes found in many other eukaryotes including the nad, sdh, cox, cob, and atp genes, with the exception of sdh2 and atp3. In addition, gene cluster analysis showed that cryptophytes possess a gene order closely resembling the jakobid flagellates Jakoba and Reclinomonas. Interestingly, the cox1 gene of R. salina, T. amphioxeia, and Storeatula species was found to contain group II introns encoding a reverse transcriptase protein, as did the cob gene of Storeatula species CCMP1868.ConclusionsThese newly sequenced genomes increase the breadth of data available from algae and will aid in the identification of general trends in mitochondrial genome evolution. While most of the genomes were highly conserved, extensive gene arrangements have shuffled gene order, perhaps due to genome rearrangements associated with hairpin-containing mobile genetic elements, tRNAs with palindromic sequences, and tandem repeat sequences. The cox1 and cob gene sequences suggest that introns have recently been acquired during cryptophyte evolution. Comparison of phylogenetic trees based on plastid and mitochondrial genome data sets underscore the different evolutionary histories of the host and endosymbiont components of present-day cryptophytes.

Highlights

  • Cryptophytes are an ecologically important group of algae comprised of phototrophic, heterotrophic and osmotrophic species

  • The mitochondrial genomes ranged in size from ~ 37 Kbp (Cryptomonas curvata) to ~ 54.5 Kbp

  • CCMP1868 and Teleaulax amphioxeia, the blue/greencolored Chroomonas placoidea, and the brown Cryptomonas curvata. These newly sequenced genomes will aid in the identification of general trends in mitochondrial genome evolution, not just within cryptophytes but between cryptophytes and their closest plastid-lacking relatives such as goniomonads and kathablepharids once these sequence data become available

Read more

Summary

Introduction

Cryptophytes are an ecologically important group of algae comprised of phototrophic, heterotrophic and osmotrophic species This lineage is of great interest to evolutionary biologists because their plastids are of red algal secondary endosymbiotic origin. Cryptophytes have a clear phylogenetic affinity to heterotrophic eukaryotes and possess four genomes: host-derived nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, and plastid and nucleomorph genomes of endosymbiotic origin. Cryptophyte cells contain four genomes: host-derived nuclear and mitochondrial genomes, and plastid and nucleomorph genomes of endosymbiotic origin. Given this unusual feature, cryptophytes provide direct evidence for secondary endosymbiosis, a process whereby a photoautotrophic eukaryote is engulfed by a phagotrophic eukaryote [13, 14]. Secondary endosymbiosis has given rise to photosynthetic groups in other protist lineages as well (e.g., euglenoids and chlorarachniophytes from greenalgal derived secondary endosymbioses, and cryptophytes haptophytes, stramenopiles, and dinoflagellates, whose plastids are of red-algal origin)

Methods
Results
Discussion
Conclusion
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call