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Evidence of horizontal gene transfer between land plant plastids has surprising conservation implications
Authors:Lars Hedens  Petter Larsson  Bodil Cronholm  Irene Bisang
Institution:1. Department of Botany, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Box 50007, SE-104 05 Stockholm, Sweden;2. Department of Bioinformatics and Genetics, Swedish Museum of Natural History, Box 50007, SE-104 05 Stockholm, Sweden;3. Centre for Palaeogenetics, Stockholm University, SE-106 91 Stockholm, Sweden
Abstract:Background and AimsHorizontal gene transfer (HGT) is an important evolutionary mechanism because it transfers genetic material that may code for traits or functions between species or genomes. It is frequent in mitochondrial and nuclear genomes but has not been demonstrated between plastid genomes of different green land plant species.MethodsWe Sanger-sequenced the nuclear internal transcribed spacers (ITS1 and 2) and the plastid rpl16 G2 intron (rpl16). In five individuals with foreign rpl16 we also sequenced atpB-rbcL and trnLUAA-trnFGAA.Key ResultsWe discovered 14 individuals of a moss species with typical nuclear ITSs but foreign plastid rpl16 from a species of a distant lineage. None of the individuals with three plastid markers sequenced contained all foreign markers, demonstrating the transfer of plastid fragments rather than the entire plastid genome, i.e. entire plastids were not transferred. The two lineages diverged 165–185 Myr BP. The extended time interval since lineage divergence suggests that the foreign rpl16 is more likely explained by HGT than by hybridization or incomplete lineage sorting.ConclusionsWe provide the first conclusive evidence of interspecific plastid-to-plastid HGT among land plants. Two aspects are critical: it occurred at several localities during the massive colonization of recently disturbed open habitats that were created by large-scale liming as a freshwater biodiversity conservation measure; and it involved mosses whose unique life cycle includes spores that first develop a filamentous protonema phase. We hypothesize that gene transfer is facilitated when protonema filaments of different species intermix intimately when colonizing disturbed early succession habitats.
Keywords:Biodiversity conservation  Bryum pseudotriquetrum  disturbed habitat  filamentous protonema  horizontal gene transfer  moss  plastid fragments  Scorpidium cossonii  unique life history
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