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1.
The streptophytes comprise the Charophyceae sensu Mattox and Stewart (a morphologically diverse group of fresh‐water green algae) and the embryophytes (land plants). Several charophycean groups are currently recognized. These include the Charales, Coleochaetales, Chlorokybales, Klebsormidiales and Zygnemophyceae (Desmidiales and Zygnematales). Recently, SSU rRNA gene sequence data allied Mesostigma viride (Prasinophyceae) with the Streptophyta. Complete chloroplast sequence data, however, placed Mesostigma sister to all green algae, not with the streptophytes. Several morphological, ultrastructural and biochemical features unite these lineages into a monophyletic group including embryophytes, but evolutionary relationships among the basal streptophytes remain ambiguous. To date, numerous studies using SSU rRNA gene sequences have yielded differing phylogenies with varying degrees of support dependent upon taxon sampling and choice of phylogenetic method. Like SSU data, chloroplast DNA sequence data have been used to examine relationships within the Charales, Coleochaetales, Zygnemophyceae and embryophytes. Representatives of all basal streptophyte lineages have not been examined using chloroplast data in a single analysis. Phylogenetic analyses were performed using DNA sequences of rbcL (the genes encoding the large subunit of rubisco) and atpB (the beta‐subunit of ATPase) to examine relationships of basal streptophyte lineages. Preliminary analyses placed the branch leading to Mesostigma as the basal lineage in the Streptophyta with Chlorokybus, the sole representative of the Chlorokybales, branching next. Klebsormidiales and the enigmatic genus Entransia were sister taxa. Sister to these, the Charales, Coleochaetales, embryophytes and Zygnemophyceae formed a monophyletic group with Charales and Coleochaetales sister to each other and this clade sister to the embryophytes.  相似文献   

2.
Kawachi  M.  Inouye  I.  Honda  D.  O''kelly  C.J.  Bailey  J.C.  Bidigare  R.R.  & Andersen  R.A. 《Journal of phycology》2000,36(S3):35-35
The streptophytes comprise the Charophyceae sensu Mattox and Stewart (a morphologically diverse group of fresh-water green algae) and the embryophytes (land plants). Several charophycean groups are currently recognized. These include the Charales, Coleochaetales, Chlorokybales, Klebsormidiales and Zygnemophyceae (Desmidiales and Zygnematales). Recently, SSU rRNA gene sequence data allied Mesostigma viride (Prasinophyceae) with the Streptophyta. Complete chloroplast sequence data, however, placed Mesostigma sister to all green algae, not with the streptophytes. Several morphological, ultrastructural and biochemical features unite these lineages into a monophyletic group including embryophytes, but evolutionary relationships among the basal streptophytes remain ambiguous. To date, numerous studies using SSU rRNA gene sequences have yielded differing phylogenies with varying degrees of support dependent upon taxon sampling and choice of phylogenetic method. Like SSU data, chloroplast DNA sequence data have been used to examine relationships within the Charales, Coleochaetales, Zygnemophyceae and embryophytes. Representatives of all basal streptophyte lineages have not been examined using chloroplast data in a single analysis. Phylogenetic analyses were performed using DNA sequences of rbc L (the genes encoding the large subunit of rubisco) and atp B (the beta-subunit of ATPase) to examine relationships of basal streptophyte lineages. Preliminary analyses placed the branch leading to Mesostigma as the basal lineage in the Streptophyta with Chlorokybus , the sole representative of the Chlorokybales, branching next. Klebsormidiales and the enigmatic genus Entransia were sister taxa. Sister to these, the Charales, Coleochaetales, embryophytes and Zygnemophyceae formed a monophyletic group with Charales and Coleochaetales sister to each other and this clade sister to the embryophytes.  相似文献   

3.

Background  

The Viridiplantae (land plants and green algae) consist of two monophyletic lineages, the Chlorophyta and the Streptophyta. The Streptophyta include all embryophytes and a small but diverse group of freshwater algae traditionally known as the Charophyceae (e.g. Charales, Coleochaete and the Zygnematales). The only flagellate currently included in the Streptophyta is Mesostigma viride Lauterborn. To gain insight into the genome evolution in streptophytes, we have sequenced 10,395 ESTs from Mesostigma representing 3,300 independent contigs and compared the ESTs of Mesostigma with available plant genomes (Arabidopsis, Oryza, Chlamydomonas), with ESTs from the bryophyte Physcomitrella, the genome of the rhodophyte Cyanidioschyzon, the ESTs from the rhodophyte Porphyra, and the genome of the diatom Thalassiosira.  相似文献   

4.

Background  

The terrestrial habitat was colonized by the ancestors of modern land plants about 500 to 470 million years ago. Today it is widely accepted that land plants (embryophytes) evolved from streptophyte algae, also referred to as charophycean algae. The streptophyte algae are a paraphyletic group of green algae, ranging from unicellular flagellates to morphologically complex forms such as the stoneworts (Charales). For a better understanding of the evolution of land plants, it is of prime importance to identify the streptophyte algae that are the sister-group to the embryophytes. The Charales, the Coleochaetales or more recently the Zygnematales have been considered to be the sister group of the embryophytes However, despite many years of phylogenetic studies, this question has not been resolved and remains controversial.  相似文献   

5.
To gain insights into the phylogeny of charophytes and into their relationships with other green algae and bryophytes, we analyzed the chloroplast small and large subunit rRNA sequences of charophytes belonging to five orders (Charales, Coleochaetales, Desmidiales, Klebsormidiales, and Zygnematales), of chlorophytes from the four remaining classes of green algae, and of bryophytes representing the three classes reported in this group of land plants. We also probed the gene organization and intron content of the chloroplast rDNA operon in charophytes and bryophytes. The organization of this operon proved to be highly conserved, except in members of the Desmidiales and Zygnematales. Homologous group II introns were identified in the trnA(UGC) gene of all charophyte groups examined and in the trnI(GAU) gene of charophytes from all orders except the Desmidiales and Zygnematales. Phylogenetic analyses of concatenated rDNA sequences consistently placed the prasinophyte Mesostigma viride Lauterborn at the base of the Streptophyta and Chlorophyta, although alternative topologies positioning Mesostigma within the Streptophyta could not be rejected. A sister group relationship was unambiguously established between Chaetosphaeridium globosum (Nordstedt) Klebahn and members of the Coleochaetales. The Charales, Coleochaetales, Desmidiales, and Zygnematales were found to be monophyletic, and a sister group relationship was observed for the Desmidiales and Zygnematales. Although our analyses failed to resolve the branching order of the Coleochaetales, Charales, Desmidiales/Zygnematales, and bryophytes, they revealed that the problematic charophyte taxon Entransia fimbriata Hughes strongly clusters with Klebsormidium flaccidum (Kützing) Silva, Mattox et Blackwell to form a basal lineage relative to the other charophyte orders examined.  相似文献   

6.
The phylum Streptophyta comprises all land plants and six monophyletic groups of charophycean green algae (Mesostigmatales, Chlorokybales, Klebsormidiales, Zygnematales, Coleochaetales, and Charales). Phylogenetic analyses of four genes encoded in three cellular compartments suggest that the Charales are sister to land plants and that charophycean green algae evolved progressively toward an increasing cellular complexity. To validate this phylogenetic hypothesis and to understand how and when the highly conservative pattern displayed by land plant chloroplast DNAs (cpDNAs) originated in the Streptophyta, we have determined the complete chloroplast genome sequence (184,933 bp) of a representative of the Charales, Chara vulgaris, and compared this genome to those of Mesostigma (Mesostigmatales), Chlorokybus (Chlorokybales), Staurastrum and Zygnema (Zygnematales), Chaetosphaeridium (Coleochaetales), and selected land plants. The phylogenies we inferred from 76 cpDNA-encoded proteins and genes using various methods favor the hypothesis that the Charales diverged before the Coleochaetales and Zygnematales. The Zygnematales were identified as sister to land plants in the best tree topology (T1), whereas Chaetosphaeridium (T2) or a clade uniting the Zygnematales and Chaetosphaeridium (T3) occupied this position in alternative topologies. Chara remained at the same basal position in trees including more land plant taxa and inferred from 56 proteins/genes. Phylogenetic inference from gene order data yielded two most parsimonious trees displaying the T1 and T3 topologies. Analyses of additional structural cpDNA features (gene order, gene content, intron content, and indels in coding regions) provided better support for T1 than for the topology of the above-mentioned four-gene tree. Our structural analyses also revealed that many of the features conserved in land plant cpDNAs were inherited from their green algal ancestors. The intron content data predicted that at least 15 of the 21 land plant group II introns were gained early during the evolution of streptophytes and that a single intron was acquired during the transition from charophycean green algae to land plants. Analyses of genome rearrangements based on inversions predicted no alteration in gene order during the transition from charophycean green algae to land plants.  相似文献   

7.

Background  

The Streptophyta comprise all land plants and six monophyletic groups of charophycean green algae. Phylogenetic analyses of four genes from three cellular compartments support the following branching order for these algal lineages: Mesostigmatales, Chlorokybales, Klebsormidiales, Zygnematales, Coleochaetales and Charales, with the last lineage being sister to land plants. Comparative analyses of the Mesostigma viride (Mesostigmatales) and land plant chloroplast genome sequences revealed that this genome experienced many gene losses, intron insertions and gene rearrangements during the evolution of charophyceans. On the other hand, the chloroplast genome of Chaetosphaeridium globosum (Coleochaetales) is highly similar to its land plant counterparts in terms of gene content, intron composition and gene order, indicating that most of the features characteristic of land plant chloroplast DNA (cpDNA) were acquired from charophycean green algae. To gain further insight into when the highly conservative pattern displayed by land plant cpDNAs originated in the Streptophyta, we have determined the cpDNA sequences of the distantly related zygnematalean algae Staurastrum punctulatum and Zygnema circumcarinatum.  相似文献   

8.
BACKGROUND AND AIMS: Consensus higher-level molecular phylogenies present a compelling case that an ancient divergence separates eukaryotic green algae into two major monophyletic lineages, Chlorophyta and Streptophyta, and a residuum of green algae, which have been referred to prasinophytes or micromonadophytes. Nuclear DNA content estimates have been published for less than 1% of the described green algal members of Chlorophyta, which includes multicellular green marine algae and freshwater flagellates (e.g. Chlamydomonas and Volvox). The present investigation summarizes the state of our knowledge and adds substantially to our database of C-values, especially for the streptophyte charophycean lineage which is the sister group of the land plants. A recent list of 2C nuclear DNA contents for isolates and species of green algae is expanded by 72 to 157. METHODS: The DNA-localizing fluorochrome DAPI (4',6-diamidino-2-phenylindole) and red blood cell (chicken erythrocytes) standard were used to estimate 2C values with static microspectrophotometry. Key RESULTS: In Chlorophyta, including Chlorophyceae, Prasinophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae and Ulvophyceae, 2C DNA estimates range from 0.01 to 5.8 pg. Nuclear DNA content variation trends are noted and discussed for specific problematic taxon pairs, including Ulotrichales-Ulvales, and Cladophorales-Siphonocladales. For Streptophyta, 2C nuclear DNA contents range from 0.2 to 6.4 pg, excluding the highly polyploid Charales and Desmidiales, which have genome sizes of up to 14.8 and 46.8 pg, respectively. Nuclear DNA content data for Streptophyta superimposed on a contemporary molecular phylogeny indicate that early diverging lineages, including some members of Chlorokybales, Coleochaetales and Klebsormidiales, have genomes as small as 0.1-0.5 pg. It is proposed that the streptophyte ancestral nuclear genome common to both the charophyte and the embryophyte lineages can be characterized as 1C = 0.2 pg and 1n = 6. CONCLUSIONS: These data will help pre-screen candidate species for the on-going construction of bacterial artificial chromosome nuclear genome libraries for land plant ancestors. Data for the prasinophyte Mesostigma are of particular interest as this alga reportedly most closely resembles the 'ancestral green flagellate'. Both mechanistic and ecological processes are discussed that could have produced the observed C-value increase of >100-fold in the charophyte green algae whereas the ancestral genome was conserved in the embryophytes.  相似文献   

9.

Background  

The Viridiplantae (green algae and land plants) consist of two monophyletic lineages: the Chlorophyta and the Streptophyta. Most green algae belong to the Chlorophyta, while the Streptophyta include all land plants and a small group of freshwater algae known as Charophyceae. Eukaryotes attach a poly-A tail to the 3' ends of most nuclear-encoded mRNAs. In embryophytes, animals and fungi, the signal for polyadenylation contains an A-rich sequence (often AAUAAA or related sequence) 13 to 30 nucleotides upstream from the cleavage site, which is commonly referred to as the near upstream element (NUE). However, it has been reported that the pentanucleotide UGUAA is used as polyadenylation signal for some genes in volvocalean algae.  相似文献   

10.
The tremendous diversity of land plants all descended from a single charophyte green alga that colonized the land somewhere between 430 and 470 million years ago. Six orders of charophyte green algae, in addition to embryophytes, comprise the Streptophyta s.l. Previous studies have focused on reconstructing the phylogeny of organisms tied to this key colonization event, but wildly conflicting results have sparked a contentious debate over which lineage gave rise to land plants. The dominant view has been that 'stoneworts,' or Charales, are the sister lineage, but an alternative hypothesis supports the Zygnematales (often referred to as "pond scum") as the sister lineage. In this paper, we provide a well-supported, 160-nuclear-gene phylogenomic analysis supporting the Zygnematales as the closest living relative to land plants. Our study makes two key contributions to the field: 1) the use of an unbiased method to collect a large set of orthologs from deeply diverging species and 2) the use of these data in determining the sister lineage to land plants. We anticipate this updated phylogeny not only will hugely impact lesson plans in introductory biology courses, but also will provide a solid phylogenetic tree for future green-lineage research, whether it be related to plants or green algae.  相似文献   

11.
Green algae and land plants trace their evolutionary history to a unique common ancestor. This ``green lineage' is phylogenetically subdivided into two distinct assemblages, the Chlorophyta and the Streptophyta. The Chlorophyta includes the Chlorophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae, Ulvophyceae, and Prasinopohyceae, whereas the Streptophyta includes the Charophyceae plus the bryophytes, ferns, and all other multicellular land plants (Embryophyta). The Prasinophyceae is believed to contain the earliest divergences within the green lineage. Phylogenetic analyses using rDNA sequences identify the prasinophytes as a paraphyletic taxon that diverges at the base of the Chlorophyta. rDNA analyses, however, provide ambiguous results regarding the identity of the flagellate ancestor of the Streptophyta. We have sequenced the actin-encoding cDNAs from Scherffelia dubia (Prasinophyceae), Coleochaete scutata, Spirogyra sp. (Charophyceae), and the single-copy actin gene from Mesostigma viride (Prasinophyceae). Phylogenetic analyses show Mesostigma to be the earliest divergence within the Streptophyta and provide direct evidence for a scaly, biflagellate, unicellular ancestor for this lineage. This result is supported by the existence of two conserved actin-coding region introns (positions 20-3, 152-1), and one intron in the 5′-untranslated region of the actin gene shared by Mesostigma and the embryophytes. Received: 10 July 1997 / Accepted: 9 April 1998  相似文献   

12.
Numerous evolutionary innovations were required to enable freshwater green algae to colonize terrestrial habitats and thereby initiate the evolution of land plants (embryophytes). These adaptations probably included changes in cell-wall composition and architecture that were to become essential for embryophyte development and radiation. However, it is not known to what extent the polymers that are characteristic of embryophyte cell walls, including pectins, hemicelluloses, glycoproteins and lignin, evolved in response to the demands of the terrestrial environment or whether they pre-existed in their algal ancestors. Here we show that members of the advanced charophycean green algae (CGA), including the Charales, Coleochaetales and Zygnematales, but not basal CGA (Klebsormidiales and Chlorokybales), have cell walls that are comparable in several respects to the primary walls of embryophytes. Moreover, we provide both chemical and immunocytochemical evidence that selected Coleochaete species have cell walls that contain small amounts of lignin or lignin-like polymers derived from radical coupling of hydroxycinnamyl alcohols. Thus, the ability to synthesize many of the components that characterize extant embryophyte walls evolved during divergence within CGA. Our study provides new insight into the evolutionary window during which the structurally complex walls of embryophytes originated, and the significance of the advanced CGA during these events.  相似文献   

13.
The freshwater green alga Coleochaete Breb. (Coleochaetaceae; Coleochaetales) is a key streptophyte genus and is important to the understanding of the evolutionary origin of embryophytes (land plants). To date only a few species have been available from public culture collections. To facilitate research on this genus we have isolated 17 previously uncultured species of Coloechaete from material collected in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic. Sequences for the genes rbcL and atpB were determined for these new isolates of Coleochaete (and for existing cultures) and combined with sequences from representative other streptophytes. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that Coleochaete, along with Chaetosphaeridium and Chara, are closely related to embryophytes and constitute a ‘higher streptophyte’ clade. At least four well‐supported lineages exist within Coleochaete. Characteristic growth forms have been identified for these four lineages, with important characters including aspects of thallus establishment, thallus habit, zygote development and hair sheath position. These data provide an improved understanding of species diversity and character evolution in the genus Coleochaete, and facilitate examination of hypotheses concerning character evolution in the streptophytes.  相似文献   

14.
The genus Coleochaete Bréb. is considered to be a key taxon in the evolution of green algae and embryophytes (land plants), but only a few of the approximately 15 species have been studied with molecular phylogenetic methods. We report here the sequences of the gene rbcL from six new cultures of Coleochaete and two of Chaetosphaeridium Klebahn. These sequences were combined with 32 additional sequences, and phylogenetic analyses were performed with maximum likelihood, distance optimality, and parsimony methods. Important subgroups within Coleochaete include two primary lineages, one marked by fully corticated zygotes and the other by naked or weakly corticated zygotes. In the first lineage there is a subclade with tightly joined filaments and distinctive (“T‐shaped”) cell division, an assemblage of strains that resembles the endophytic species Coleochaete nitellarum Jost, and a clade with loosely joined filaments and “Y‐shaped” cell divisions. Consistent with recent multigene phylogenies, these analyses support the monophyly of the Coleochaetales, place the Charales as the sister taxon to land plants, and indicate that Chaetosphaeridium is far more closely related to Coleochaete than to Mesostigma Lauterborn.  相似文献   

15.
Cimino  M. T.    Karol  K. G.  Lewandowski  J.D.  & Delwiche  C.F. 《Journal of phycology》2000,36(S3):14-14
The freshwater green alga Coleochaete Breb. (Coleochaetaceae; Coleochaetales) is a key streptophyte genus and is important to the understanding of the evolutionary origin of embryophytes (land plants). To date only a few species have been available from public culture collections. To facilitate research on this genus we have isolated 17 previously uncultured species of Coloechaete from material collected in the United States, Puerto Rico, and the Dominican Republic. Sequences for the genes rbcL and atp B were determined for these new isolates of Coleochaete (and for existing cultures) and combined with sequences from representative other streptophytes. Phylogenetic analyses indicate that Coleochaete , along with Chaetosphaeridium and Chara , are closely related to embryophytes and constitute a 'higher streptophyte' clade. At least four well-supported lineages exist within Coleochaete. Characteristic growth forms have been identified for these four lineages, with important characters including aspects of thallus establishment, thallus habit, zygote development and hair sheath position. These data provide an improved understanding of species diversity and character evolution in the genus Coleochaete , and facilitate examination of hypotheses concerning character evolution in the streptophytes.  相似文献   

16.
R L Chapman  M A Buchheim 《Bio Systems》1992,28(1-3):127-137
Phylogenetic analysis of 381 informative sites in partial sequences of nuclear-encoded large and small subunit ribosomal RNAs from 38 chlorophyll a- and b-containing plants (Chlorobionta sensu Bremer) including tracheophytes, bryophytes, charophytes and chlorophytes, supports the hypotheses of: (1) monophyly of the green plants (excluding Euglenophyta); (2) monophyly of the embryophytes; (3) non-monophyly of the bryophytes; (4) monophyly of the tracheophytes; and (5) a single origin of embryophytes from charophycean green algae. The Charales and Klebsormidium appear to be the green algae most closely related to the land plants. The unexpected basal divergence of Coleochaete and the apparent non-monophyly of the Zygnematales are not robustly supported and, thus, are interpreted to be sources of new questions, rather than new phylogenetic hypotheses.  相似文献   

17.
The green lineage (Viridiplantae) comprises the green algae and their descendants the land plants, and is one of the major groups of oxygenic photosynthetic eukaryotes. Current hypotheses posit the early divergence of two discrete clades from an ancestral green flagellate. One clade, the Chlorophyta, comprises the early diverging prasinophytes, which gave rise to the core chlorophytes. The other clade, the Streptophyta, includes the charophyte green algae from which the land plants evolved. Multi-marker and genome scale phylogenetic studies have greatly improved our understanding of broad-scale relationships of the green lineage, yet many questions persist, including the branching orders of the prasinophyte lineages, the relationships among core chlorophyte clades (Chlorodendrophyceae, Ulvophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae and Chlorophyceae), and the relationships among the streptophytes. Current phylogenetic hypotheses provide an evolutionary framework for molecular evolutionary studies and comparative genomics. This review summarizes our current understanding of organelle genome evolution in the green algae, genomic insights into the ecology of oceanic picoplanktonic prasinophytes, molecular mechanisms underlying the evolution of complexity in volvocine green algae, and the evolution of genetic codes and the translational apparatus in green seaweeds. Finally, we discuss molecular evolution in the streptophyte lineage, emphasizing the genetic facilitation of land plant origins.  相似文献   

18.
The transition of plant life from aquatic algae to land plants was one of the major events in the history of life. However, in hypothesizing the evolutionary path of the transition, limited shared phenotypic characters in aquatic algae and land plants (embryophytes) have been a major hinderance. Chloroplast genomes contain characters useful in tracing evolutionary histories. Embryophyte chloroplast genomes are distinguished from algal cpDNAs by the presence of over 20 group II introns and three ribosomal protein operons (rpl23, clpP and 3?rps12 operons). These phylogenomic features indicate a phylogenetic relationship of charophytes and embryophytes. In addition to these operons and introns, the evolution of rRNA and psbB operon evolution of streptophyte lineages will be incorporated with major biological phenotypic features to produce a phylogenetic tree. Basal embryophytes, the antithetic hypothesis, monophyly of embryophytes, and paraphyly of charophytes will be discussed. Strepotophytes are classified into three major groups (basal streptophytes, mid‐divergent streptophytes and late divergent charophytes‐embryophytes).  相似文献   

19.
20.
Marin B  Melkonian M 《Protist》1999,150(4):399-417
Complete nuclear-encoded SSU rRNA sequences have been obtained from three taxa of streptophyte green algae (Klebsormidium nitens, Nitella capillaris, Chaetosphaeridium globosum) and two strains of the scaly green flagellate Mesostigma viride. Phylogenetic analyses of 70 taxa of Viridiplantae (Chlorophyta and Streptophyta) and 57 taxa of streptophyte green algae and embryophyte plants using distance, parsimony and likelihood methods revealed a novel monophyletic lineage among the Streptophyta comprising the genera Mesostigma and Chaetosphaeridium. This lineage is described here as the Mesostigmatophyceae classis nova. Our analyses demonstrate that (1) scaly green flagellates (prasinophytes) are polyphyletic, (2) a scaly green flagellate is a member of the Streptophyta and forms a clade with the oogamous, filamentous Chaetosphaeridium to the exclusion of all other known streptophyte green algae, (3) a previously published SSU rRNA sequence of Chaetosphaeridium (AF113506) is chimeric and contains part of a fungal SSU rRNA, and (4) the phylogenetic relationships between the Mesostigmatophyceae and other streptophyte green algae remain unresolved by SSU rRNA sequence comparisons.  相似文献   

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