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1.
Nuclear-encoded small subunit ribosomal RNA gene (185rDNA) sequences were determined for Chlamydomonas moewusii Gerloff and five chlorococcalean algae (Chlorococcum hypnosporum Starr; Chlorococcum oleofaciens Trainor et Bold; Chlorococcum sp.; Tetracystis aeria Brown et Bold; Protosiphon botryoides (Kützingl Klebs). All these algae are characterized by a clockwise CCW) flagellar apparatus. Phylogenetic trees were constructed from sequences from these algae together with 20 green algae. All algae with a CW flagellar apparatus form a monophyletic clade (CW group). Three principal clades can be recognized in the CW group, although no morphological character supports monophyly of any of these three clades. The 185rDNA trees clearly demonstrate the non-monophyly of the Chlamydomonadales and Chlorococcales, suggesting that vegetative morphology does not reflect phylogenetic relationships in the CW group. The paraphyly or polyphyly of the genus Chlamydomonas and Chlorococcum are also revealed. Present analysis suggests that the presence or absence of a zoospore's cell wall and the multinucleate condition have limited taxonomic values at higher taxonomic ranks.  相似文献   

2.
Most mitochondrial genomes in the green algal phylum Chlorophyta are AT‐rich, circular‐mapping DNA molecules. However, mitochondrial genomes from the Reinhardtii clade of the Chlorophyceae lineage are linear and sometimes fragmented into subgenomic forms. Moreover, Polytomella capuana, from the Reinhardtii clade, has an elevated GC content (57.2%). In the present study, we examined mitochondrial genome conformation and GC bias in the Oogamochlamys clade of the Chlorophyceae, which phylogenetic data suggest is closely related to the Reinhardtii clade. Total DNA from selected Oogamochlamys taxa, including four Lobochlamys culleus (H. Ettl) Pröschold, B. Marin, U. G. Schlöss. et Melkonian strains, Lobochlamys segnis (H. Ettl) Pröschold, B. Marin, U. G. Schlöss. et Melkonian, and Oogamochlamys gigantea (O. Dill) Pröschold, B. Marin, U. G. Schlöss. et Melkonian, was subjected to Southern blot analyses with cob and cox1 probes, and the results suggest that the mitochondrial genome of these taxa is represented by multiple‐sized linear DNA fragments with overlapping homologies. On the basis of these data, we propose that linear mitochondrial DNA with a propensity to become fragmented arose in an ancestor common to the Reinhardtii and Oogamochlamys clades or even earlier in the evolutionary history of the Chlorophyceae. Analyses of partial cob and cox1 sequences from these Oogamochlamys taxa revealed an unusually high GC content (49.9%–65.1%) and provided evidence for the accumulation of cob and cox1 pseudogenes and truncated sequences in the mitochondrial genome of all L. culleus strains examined.  相似文献   

3.
Complete nuclear-encoded small-subunit ribosomal RNA (rRNA) sequences were determined from Nephroselmis olivacea Stein, Pseudoscourfieldia marina (Throndsen) Manton, Scherffelia dubia (Perty) Pascher, and Tetraselmis striata Butcher (Chlorophyta) to investigate the evolutionary position of these scaly green flagellates. Results of neighbor-joining and maximum parsimony phylogenetic analyses demonstrate at least two independent prasinophyte lineages defined by N. olivacea/P. marina and S. dubia/T. striata, which together with the Chlorophyceae, Pleurastrophyceae, and Ulvophyceae form a monophyletic group. Within this assemblage, N. olivacea and P. marina represent an early-diverging lineage that is evolutionarily distinct from the later-diverging S. dubia/T. striata clade. The branch point of the S. dubia/T. striata clade precedes the near-simultaneous radiation of the Chlorophyceae, Ulvophyceae, and Microthamniales. Though interrelationships between these three latter groups of algae are not resolved, the phylogenetic analyses demonstrate that the Prasinophyceae (sensu Moestrup and Throndsen) and the Pleurastrophyceae (sensu Mattox and Stewart) are not monophyletic classes.  相似文献   

4.
5.
Cladistic analysis of nuclear-encoded rRNA sequence data provided us with the basis for some new hypotheses of relationships within the green algal class Ulvophyceae. The orders Ulotrichales and Ulvales are separated from the clade formed by the remaining orders of siphonous and siphonocladous Ulvophyceae (Caulerpales, Siphonocladales /Cladophorales [S/C] complex, and the Dasycladales), by the Chlorophyceae and Pleurastrophyceae. Our results suggest that the Ulvophyceae is not a monophyletic group. Examination of inter- and intra-ordinal relationships within the siphonous and siphonocladous ulvophycean algae revealed that Cladophora, Chaetomorpha, Anadyomene, Microdictyon, Cladophoropsis and Dictyosphaeria form a clade. Thus the hypothesis, based on ultrastructural features, that the Siphonocladales and Cladophorales are closely related is supported. Also, the Caulerpales is a monophyletic group with two lineages; Caulerpa, Halimeda, and Udotea comprise one, and Bryopsis and Codium comprise the other. The Dasycladales (Cymopolia and Batophora) also forms a clade, but this clade is not inferred to be the sister group to the S/C complex as has been proposed. Instead, it is either the sister taxon to the Caulerpales or basal to the Caulerpales and S/C clade The Trentepohliales is also included at the base of the siphonous and siphonocladous ulvophycean clade. The Pleurastrophyceae, which, like the Ulvophyceae, posses a counter-clockwise arrangement of flagellar basal bodies, are more closely related to the Chlorophyceae than to the Ulvophyceae based on rRNA sequences. Thus, the arrangement of basal bodies does not diagnose a monophyletic group. Previously reported hypotheses of phylogenetic relationships of ulvophycean algae were tested. In each case, additional evolutionary steps were required to obtain the proposed relationships. Relationships of ulvophycean algae to other classes of green algae are discussed.  相似文献   

6.
The Chlorophyceae (sensu Mattox and Stewart) is a morphologically diverse class of the Chlorophyta displaying biflagellate and quadriflagellate motile cells with varying configurations of the flagellar apparatus. Phylogenetic analyses of 18S rDNA data and combined 18S and 26S rDNA data from a broad range of chlorophycean taxa uncovered five major monophyletic groups (Chlamydomonadales, Sphaeropleales, Oedogoniales, Chaetophorales, and Chaetopeltidales) but could not resolve their branching order. To gain insight into the interrelationships of these groups, we analyzed multiple genes encoded by the chloroplast genomes of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii P. A. Dang. and Chlamydomonas moewusii Gerloff (Chlamydomonadales), Scenedesmus obliquus (Turpin) Kütz. (Sphaeropleales), Oedogonium cardiacum Wittr. (Oedogoniales), Stigeoclonium helveticum Vischer (Chaetophorales), and Floydiella terrestris (Groover et Hofstetter) Friedl et O’Kelly (Chaetopeltidales). The C. moewusii, Oedogonium, and Floydiella chloroplast DNAs were partly sequenced using a random strategy. Trees were reconstructed from nucleotide and amino acid data sets derived from 44 protein‐coding genes of 11 chlorophytes and nine streptophytes as well as from 57 protein‐coding genes of the six chlorophycean taxa. All best trees identified two robustly supported major lineages within the Chlorophyceae: a clade uniting the Chlamydomonadales and Sphaeropleales, and a clade uniting the Oedogoniales, Chaetophorales, and Chaetopeltidales (OCC clade). This dichotomy is independently supported by molecular signatures in chloroplast genes, such as insertions/deletions and the distribution of trans‐spliced group II introns. Within the OCC clade, the sister relationship observed for the Chaetophorales and Chaetopeltidales is also strengthened by independent data. Character state reconstruction of basal body orientation allowed us to refine hypotheses regarding the evolution of the flagellar apparatus.  相似文献   

7.
The Antarctic psychrophilic green alga Chlamy‐domonas sp. UWO 241 is an emerging model for studying microbial adaptation to polar environments. However, little is known about its evolutionary history and its phylogenetic relationship with other chlamydomonadalean algae is equivocal. Here, we attempt to clarify the phylogenetic position of UWO 241, specifically with respect to Chlamydomonas rau‐densis SAG 49.72. Contrary to a previous report, we show that UWO 241 is a distinct species from SAG 49.72. Our phylogenetic analyses of nuclear and plastid DNA sequences reveal that UWO 241 represents a unique lineage within the Moewusinia clade (sensu Nakada) of the Chlamydomonadales (Chlorophyceae, Chlorophyta), closely affiliated to the marine species Chlamydomonas parkeae SAG 24.89.  相似文献   

8.
An extensive phylogenetic analysis of the biflagellate genera, Chlamydomonas Ehrenberg and Chloromonas Gobi emend. Wille, was undertaken using 18S rDNA and rbcL gene sequence analysis. Emphasis was placed on 21 cold‐tolerant taxa of which 10 are from snow. These taxa occurred in four distinct clades each in the 18S rDNA and rbcL phylogenies, and when taken together suggest at least five distinct origins in cold habitats. Most of these taxa occur in a single clade (A), and all snow species occurred in this clade. In the rbcL and combined rbcL–18S rDNA analyses, the snow taxa fell into three groups. Two groups occurred in subclade 1: Chlamydomonas augustae Skuja CU, Chlamydomonas augustae UTEX, and Chlamydomonas sp.‐A and Chloromonas clathrata Korshikov, Chloromonas rosae Ettl CU, and Chloromonas rosae v. psychrophila var. nov. The third snow group, subclade 2, included three species with unique cell divisions, Chloromonas brevispina (Fritsch) Hoham, Roemer et Mullet, Chloromonas pichinchae (Lagerheim) Wille, and Chloromonas sp.‐D, and the basal Chloromonas nivalis (Chodat) Hoham et Mullet with normal cell divisions. This suggests that the snow habitat has been colonized at least twice and possibly three times in the history of these biflagellates. In the 18S rDNA tree, one cold‐tolerant Chloromonas species fell outside clade A: Chloromonas subdivisa (Pascher et Jahoda) Gerloff et Ettl. In the rbcL tree, three cold‐tolerant Chloromonas species fell outside clade A: Chloromonas subdivisa, Chloromonas sp.‐ANT1, and Chloromonas sp.‐ANT3. These results support previous findings that pyrenoids have been gained and lost several times within this complex.  相似文献   

9.
The egg capsules of some amphibians' eggs are known to become green colored before hatching. This is due to the increase of green symbionts in the egg capsule surrounding the embryo. The green symbionts in North American amphibian eggs were reported to be unicellular green algae in the Oophilaclade of Volvocales, Chlorophyceae. However, it remains unclear whether this is also the case in other parts of the world. In this study, we analyzed the green symbionts in green‐colored eggs of Hynobius nigrescens, an amphibian endemic to Japan, obtained from five distinct locations. Microscopic observations revealed that the green symbionts were similar in appearance to Oophila amblystomatis, which was reported in some amphibian eggs in North America, in which non‐motile cells of the algae had thick cell walls with reticulate protuberances. PCR‐DGGE followed by phylogenetic analyses of partial 18S rRNA sequences revealed that the symbionts from the five locations were identical and most likely unialgal in each egg capsule. They formed an independent subclade within the Oophila‐clade, indicating that H. nigrescens has a unique symbiont. Our data are consistent with the previous report on North American amphibian eggs and support the specific symbiotic relationships between Oophila‐clade symbionts and the eggs of amphibians. This is the first report on the specific symbiont‐and‐host association between an Oophila‐clade symbiont and an amphibian outside of North America. We also discuss several possibilities regarding the origin of green symbionts (vertical transmission or invasion) on the basis of the discovery and detailed observation of H. nigrescens eggs without any green symbionts.  相似文献   

10.
A coccoid green alga, Hemiflagellochloris kazakhstanica S. Watanabe, S. Tsujimura, T. Misono, S. Nakamura et H. Inoue, gen. et sp. nov., was described from soil samples of a saline irrigation land in Ili River basin, Kazakhstan. This alga had a parietal chloroplast with a pyrenoid, which was covered with starch segments and penetrated with thylakoid membranes. Reproduction occurred by the formation of aplanospores and zoospores. The aplanospores frequently formed tetrad aggregations in a mother cell. The zoospores were covered by a single‐layered cell wall and lacked stigmata. The zoospores had two flagella of considerably unequal lengths; the longer flagellum was 17–19 lm in length and the shorter one was 9–10 lm. The flagellar apparatus architecture was of the clockwise orientation group type in the Chlorophyceae. Molecular phylogenetic analysis using 18S and 28S rDNA sequence data resolved this organism in a separate clade from the green algae that had flagella of slightly unequal lengths. It was suggested that features such as inequality in flagellar lengths, parallel exsertion of basal bodies, and subapical position of the flagellar apparatus were sporadically evolved.  相似文献   

11.
A UV‐absorbing mycosporine‐like amino acid (324 nm‐MAA), so far only known from the green macroalgal genus Prasiola (Trebouxiophyceae), was also identified in other morphologically diverse green algae closely related to Prasiola spp. in 18S rDNA phylogenies. Using HPLC, a second UV‐absorbing compound was found only in Myrmecia incisa Reisigal among all studied strains. This substance showed an absorption maximum at 322 nm and hence was designated as putative 322 nm‐MAA. Preliminary UV‐exposure experiments indicated that all species containing one or the other MAA showed a strong accumulation of the respective compound, thus supporting their function as putative UV sunscreen. Both UV‐absorbing substances were only identified in the studied members of the Trebouxiophyceae but were absent in members of the Ulvophyceae and Chlorophyceae. When mapped on an 18S rDNA phylogeny, the distribution of 324 nm‐MAA was found to be scattered within the Trebouxiophyceae but was consistent with a distribution that follows phylogenetic patterns rather than ecological adaptations. The 324 nm‐MAA was also detected in two phylogenetically related species from freshwater as well as from subaerial habitats, Watanabea reniformis Hanagata et al. and isolate UR7/5, which were phylogenetically independent of Prasiola and its closer allies. MAAs were absent in another Trebouxiophyceae clade comprising lichen photobionts (Coccomyxa pringsheimii Jaag) as well as freshwater picoplanktonic algae (Choricystis minor (Skuja) Fott). The data presented suggest a chemotaxonomic value of the 324 nm‐MAA in green algal taxonomy. To address the paraphyly of the genus Myrmecia Printz as presently circumscribed, we propose the new combination Lobosphaera incisa.  相似文献   

12.
Partial sequences from the nuclear-encoded 18S and 26S ribosomal RNA molecules from representatives of the five classes of Chlorophyta sensu Mattox and Stewart (1984) were analyzed cladistically in a study of the phylogenetic relationships among the Micromonadophyceae, Pleurastrophyceae, and other green algae. The sequence data indicate that the Micromonadophyceae (= Prasinophyceae) is not monophyletic but comprises at least three lineages occupying a basal position among the green algae. Though the Pleurastrophyceae and the Ulvophyceae both possess counter-clockwise basal body orientations, the sequence data indicate that the Pleurastrophyceae is the sister group to the Chlorophyceae. The molecular data alone do not resolve the monophyly of the Pleurastrophyceae or the Ulvophyceae; however, a combined data set of molecular and non-molecular characters support a monophyletic Pleurastrophyceae. Analyses with user-defined tree topologies and the bootstrap method of character resampling indicate that the relationships shown in the most parasimonious cladograms are well supported by the character data.  相似文献   

13.
14.
Eukaryotic picoplankton was isolated from Lake Kinneret, Israel. This green picoplankton is spheroidal or ovoidal in shape. The cell wall has a network of ribs on its surface. The chloroplast is cup- or mantel-shaped without a pyrenoid. The morphology and cellular structure of this autosporic alga is identical with Mychonastes homosphaera (Skuja) Kalina et Pun?ochá?ová. The phylogenetic tree based on 18S ribo-somal RNA gene sequence data showed that M. homosphaera is placed in the Chlorophyceae and located at the base of a branch leading to the other algae possessing directly opposed orientation of the flagellar apparatus.  相似文献   

15.
Molecular phylogenetic analyses have had a major impact on the classification of the green algal class Chlorophyceae, corroborating some previous evolutionary hypotheses, but primarily promoting new interpretations of morphological evolution. One set of morphological traits that feature prominently in green algal systematics is the absolute orientation of the flagellar apparatus in motile cells, which correlates strongly with taxonomic classes and orders. The order Sphaeropleales includes diverse green algae sharing the directly opposite (DO) flagellar apparatus orientation of their biflagellate motile cells. However, algae across sphaeroplealean families differ in specific components of the DO flagellar apparatus, and molecular phylogenetic studies often have failed to provide strong support for the monophyly of the order. To test the monophyly of Sphaeropleales and of taxa with the DO flagellar apparatus, we conducted a molecular phylogenetic study of 16 accessions representing all known families and diverse affiliated lineages within the order, with data from four plastid genes (psaA, psaB, psbC, rbcL) and one nuclear ribosomal gene (18S). Although single‐gene analyses varied in topology and support values, analysis of combined data strongly supported a monophyletic Sphaeropleales. Our results also corroborated previous phylogenetic hypotheses that were based on chloroplast genome data from relatively few taxa. Specifically, our data resolved Volvocales, algae possessing predominantly biflagellate motile cells with clockwise (CW) flagellar orientation, as the monophyletic sister lineage to Sphaeropleales, and an alliance of Chaetopeltidales, Chaetophorales, and Oedogoniales, orders having multiflagellate motile cells with distinct flagellar orientations involving the DO and CW forms.  相似文献   

16.
Since the phylogenetic relationships of the green plants (green algae and land plants) have been extensively studied using 18S ribosomal RNA sequences, change in the arrangement of basal bodies in flagellate cells is considered to be one of the major evolutionary events in the green plants. However, the phylogenetic relationships between biflagellate and quadriflagellate species within the Volvocales remain uncertain. This study examined the phylogeny of three genera of quadriflagellate Volvocales (Carteria, Pseudocarteria, and Hafniomonas) using concatenated sequences from three chloroplast genes. Using these multigene sequences, all three quadriflagellate genera were basal to other members (biflagellates) of the CW (clockwise) group (the Volvocales and their relatives, the Chlorophyceae) and formed three robust clades. Since the flagellar apparatuses of these three quadriflagellate lineages are diverse, including counter clockwise (CCW) and CW orientation of the basal bodies, the CW orientation of the basal bodies might have evolved from the CCW orientation in the ancestral quadriflagellate volvocalean algae, giving rise to the biflagellates, major members of the CW group.  相似文献   

17.
The biodiversity of terrestrial algae is still grossly understudied, and African deserts in particular are barely touched in this respect. Here, four coccoid green algae from oases in the Western Desert of Egypt were characterized using a combination of morphotaxonomic, ecological and 18S rDNA data, with additional carotenoid and lipid analyses for two of the strains. Three strains were identified as affiliated with known taxa: Mychonastes sp., Asterarcys sp. (first report of this genus from a desert soil), and Stichococcus cf. deasonii. The fourth strain is proposed to represent a new cryptic genus Pharao gen. nov., with the type species P. desertorum sp. nov. The new taxon is sister to the clade of uncharacterized North American desert strains of Radiococcaceae (Chlorophyceae, Chlorophyta). The pigment profile of P. desertorum gen. et sp. nov. revealed carotenoids and chlorophylls typical of green algae. Bioorganic analysis showed a complex lipidome based on phospho‐ (PC), galacto‐ (MGDG and DGDG), betaine‐ (DGTS), and sulfoquinovosyl‐ (SQDG) membrane lipids, besides significant amounts of storage neutral lipids such as diacyl‐ (DAG) and triacylglycerols (TAG). The presence of saturated alkyl chains within all the membrane lipid classes in P. desertorum and Asterarcys sp. appears to reflect the need to maintain membrane fluidity and viscosity. In summary, African deserts likely still harbor new taxa to be described, and lipidomic analyses of such taxa may provide clues about their ability to survive in the extremely harsh desert habitats.  相似文献   

18.
To provide insights into the occurrence, evolution, and phylogenetic distribution of discontinuous mitochondrial and chloroplast large subunit ribosomal RNAs (LSU rRNAs) among green algae, we surveyed 12 taxa representing three classes of green algae: the Chlorophyceae, Pleurastrophyceae, and Micromonadophyceae (sensu Mattox and Stewart 1984). We present evidence that discontinuous mitochondrial and chloroplast LSU rRNAs are quite widespread among green algae. Mitochondrial LSU rRNAs appear discontinuous in zoosporic chlorophycean lineages displaying a clockwise or directly opposed configuration in their flagellar apparatus, as well as in chlorococcalean autosporic taxa phylogenetically related to them, but are continuous among zoosporic green algal lineages with a counterclockwise flagellar apparatus configuration, as well as among chlorococcalean autosporic taxa phylogenetically related to them. Chloroplast LSU rRNAs appear discontinuous in all of the lineages investigated. Discontinuous mitochondrial LSU rRNA represents a molecular trait that might have originated at or near the base of Chlorophyceae, whereas discontinuous chloroplast LSU rRNA might have developed very early in the evolutionary history of the green algal group itself. We suggest, therefore, that the presence of discontinuous mitochondrial but not chloroplast LSU rRNA can be used as an additional character in assessing phylogenetic affiliations among green algae.  相似文献   

19.
A study of phylogenetic relationships of the colonial green algal flagellates based on nuclear 18S and 26S rRNA sequence data suggests that the colonial habit has had at least two independent origins. All colonial taxa included in the analysis, except Stephanosphaera, are allied in a clade with Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and other Chlamydomonas taxa ascribed to the Euchlamydomonas group by Ettl. In contrast, Stephanosphaera is allied with other unicellular flagellates including Haematococcus. Comparison of the 18S and 26S data shows that the two sets of data yield different results following cladistic analysis. The 18S data provide the principal signal that supports the more basal divergences, but the data do not unambiguously address relationships among taxa in the clade that includes most colonial flagellates and Chlamydomonas taxa representative of the Euchlamydomonas group (sensu Ettl). In contrast, the 26S data have fewer informative sites that support basal divergences than the 18S data, but provide much of the signal that supports resolution of taxa in the colonial flagellate clade in an analysis of the combined 18S and 26S rRNA sequence data. Additional sequence data from the 26S molecule and additional taxa may reduce the topological ambiguity inferred from the sequence data for the colonial flagellates. Alternatively, an ancient and rapid radiation of taxa in the colonial lineage could account for the topological ambiguity. Despite some unresolved questions of relationships, cladistic analysis of the combined data sets provides some robustly supported concepts of evolution in these flagellates.  相似文献   

20.
Nuclear-encoded small-subunit (18S) ribosomal RNA genes of Chara australis R. Brown (C. corallina var. nobilis f. nobilis R.D.W.) and Nitella flexilis (L.) Ag. were amplified by polymerase chain reaction, cloned, and completely sequenced. Using structural criteria, the sequences were aligned with 18S ribosomal DNAs (rDNAs) from 11 other chlorophyll b-containing algae and six higher plants (embryophytes). Phylogenetic trees were inferred by distance, neighbor-joining, parsimony, and maximum-likelihood approaches; confidence intervals were estimated by bootstrapping, and nonrandomness of tree structure was confirmed by permutation tests. 18S rDNAs of C. australis and two Nitella species were found to be specifically related and, together with 18S rDNAs of Chlorokybus atmophyticus Geitler, Klebsormidium flaccidum (A. Br.) Silva, Mattox, et Blackwell, and two Coleochaete species, support a robust monophyletic group (Charophyceae). Although most trees favored a specific sister-group relationship between Charophyceae and embryophytes, statistical tests revealed that a sister-group relationship between Charophyceae and Chlorophyceae could not be ruled out. Additional complete sequences from 18S rDNAs of lower land plants may be required to resolve phylogenetic relationships among these organisms.  相似文献   

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