Abstract

ABSTRACTThe cold, permanently ice-covered waters of Lake Bonney, Antarctica, may seem like an uninviting place for an alga, but they are home to a diversity of photosynthetic life, including Chlamydomonas sp. UWO241, a psychrophile residing in the deep photic zone. Recently, we found that UWO241 has lost the genes responsible for light-independent chlorophyll biosynthesis, which is surprising given that this green alga comes from a light-limited environment and experiences extended periods of darkness during the Antarctic winter. Why discard such a process? We argued that it might be linked to the very high dissolved oxygen concentration of Lake Bonney at the depth at which UWO241 is found. Oxygen is the Achilles’ heel of the key enzyme involved in light-independent chlorophyll biosynthesis: DPOR. If this hypothesis is true, then other algae in Lake Bonney should also be susceptible to losing DPOR, such as Chlamydomonas sp. ICE-MDV, which predominantly resides in the chemocline, a depth with an even higher oxygen concentration than that where UWO241 exists. Here, we report that, contrary to our earlier prediction, ICE-MDV has maintained the genes encoding DPOR. We briefly discuss the implications of this finding in relation to the loss of light-independent chlorophyll synthesis in UWO241.

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