Abstract

BackgroundChorella is the representative taxon of Chlorellales in Trebouxiophyceae, and its chloroplast (cp) genomic information has been thought to depend only on studies concerning Chlorella vulgaris and GenBank information of C. variablis. Mitochondrial (mt) genomic information regarding Chlorella is currently unavailable. To elucidate the evolution of organelle genomes and genetic information of Chlorella, we have sequenced and characterized the cp and mt genomes of Arctic Chlorella sp. ArM0029B.ResultsThe 119,989-bp cp genome lacking inverted repeats and 65,049-bp mt genome were sequenced. The ArM0029B cp genome contains 114 conserved genes, including 32 tRNA genes, 3 rRNA genes, and 79 genes encoding proteins. Chlorella cp genomes are highly rearranged except for a Chlorella-specific six-gene cluster, and the ArM0029B plastid resembles that of Chlorella variabilis except for a 15-kb gene cluster inversion. In the mt genome, 62 conserved genes, including 27 tRNA genes, 3 rRNA genes, and 32 genes encoding proteins were determined. The mt genome of ArM0029B is similar to that of the non-photosynthetic species Prototheca and Heicosporidium. The ArM0029B mt genome contains a group I intron, with an ORF containing two LAGLIDADG motifs, in cox1. The intronic ORF is shared by C. vulgaris and Prototheca. The phylogeny of the plastid genome reveals that ArM0029B showed a close relationship of Chlorella to Parachlorella and Oocystis within Chlorellales. The distribution of the cox1 intron at 721 support membership in the order Chlorellales. Mitochondrial phylogenomic analyses, however, indicated that ArM0029B shows a greater affinity to MX-AZ01 and Coccomyxa than to the Helicosporidium-Prototheca clade, although the detailed phylogenetic relationships among the three taxa remain to be resolved.ConclusionsThe plastid genome of ArM0029B is similar to that of C. variabilis. The mt sequence of ArM0029B is the first genome to be reported for Chlorella. Chloroplast genome phylogeny supports monophyly of the seven investigated members of Chlorellales. The presence of the cox1 intron at 721 in all four investigated Chlorellales taxa indicates that the cox1 intron had been introduced in early Chorellales as a cis-splice form and that the cis-splicing intron was inherited to recent Chlorellales and was recently trans-spliced in Helicosporidium.

Highlights

  • Chorella is the representative taxon of Chlorellales in Trebouxiophyceae, and its chloroplast genomic information has been thought to depend only on studies concerning Chlorella vulgaris and GenBank information of C. variablis

  • The results indicate that ArM0029B belongs to the genus Chlorella along with C. vulgaris and C. variabilis and that C. variabilis is the closer taxon to ArM0029B

  • The plastid genome of ArM0029B lacking a large inverted repeat (IR) is close to C. variabilis NC64A: both species displayed the same content of conserved genes and almost the same gene order

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Summary

Introduction

Chorella is the representative taxon of Chlorellales in Trebouxiophyceae, and its chloroplast (cp) genomic information has been thought to depend only on studies concerning Chlorella vulgaris and GenBank information of C. variablis. Mitochondrial (mt) genomic information regarding Chlorella is currently unavailable. More than 20 organelle genomes have been completely sequenced in green microalgae [1]. Chloroplasts and mitochondria in green algae have multiple copies of a single type of circular genome. Various plastid genome sizes have been reported: 37.7 kb in the non-photosynthetic alga Helicosporidium sp. Plastid genomes in higher plants and green algae encode 88–138 genes [4,5]. Typical plastid genomes contain a large inverted repeat (IR) region with genes for rRNA, several tRNAs, and proteins. The size of the mitochondrial (mt) genome varies among species: 6 kb in Plasmodium to 3,000 kb in the cucumber family [8,9]. The number of mt genes varies: 5 genes in Plasmodium and about 100 genes in Jakobid flagellates [10]

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