Abstract

Recent work on the chlamydomonadalean green alga Haematococcus lacustris uncovered the largest plastid genome on record: a whopping 1.35 Mb with >90 % non-coding DNA. A 500-word description of this genome was published in the journal Genome Announcements. But such a short report for such a large genome leaves many unanswered questions. For instance, the H. lacustris plastome was found to encode only 12 tRNAs, less than half that of a typical plastome, it appears to have a non-standard genetic code, and is one of only a few known plastid DNAs (ptDNAs), out of thousands of available sequences, not biased in adenine and thymine. Here, I take a closer look at the H. lacustris plastome, comparing its size, content and architecture to other large organelle DNAs, including those from close relatives in the Chlamydomonadales. I show that the H. lacustris plastid coding repertoire is not as unusual as initially thought, representing a standard set of rRNAs, tRNAs and protein-coding genes, where the canonical stop codon UGA appears to sometimes signify tryptophan. The intergenic spacers are dense with repeats, and it is within these regions where potential answers to the source of such extreme genomic expansion lie. By comparing ptDNA sequences of two closely related strains of H. lacustris, I argue that the mutation rate of the non-coding DNA is high and contributing to plastome inflation. Finally, by exploring publicly available RNA-sequencing data, I find that most of the intergenic ptDNA is transcriptionally active.

Highlights

  • Most scientists can probably relate to the following feeling

  • ‘A plastid genome with a length of 1352 kb! Did the authors accidentally move the decimal to the right by one?’ I quickly downloaded the genome to a sequence viewer and, sure enough, it was 1.35 Mb, making it the largest plastid DNAs (ptDNAs) on record

  • First and foremost, the intent of this commentary is not to criticize Bauman et al (2018). This small team of scientists works for the private company Synthetic Genomics (La Jolla, CA, USA), which is primarily focused on applied research, not organelle genome evolution

Read more

Summary

David Roy Smith*

Received: 29 July 2018 Editorial decision: 21 September 2018 Accepted: 27 September 2018 Published: 01 October 2018 Associate Editor: Teofil Nakov Citation: Smith DR. Haematococcus lacustris: the makings of a giant-sized chloroplast genome.

Introduction
Who is Haematococcus lacustris?
Updating the annotation
Big compared to what?
Why so large?
Findings
Literature Cited
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