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A single origin of the photosynthetic organelle in different Paulinella lineages
Authors:Hwan Su Yoon   Takuro Nakayama   Adrian Reyes-Prieto   Robert A Andersen   Sung Min Boo   Ken-ichiro Ishida  Debashish Bhattacharya
Affiliation:(1) Bigelow Laboratory for Ocean Sciences, West Boothbay Harbor, Maine, USA;(2) Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences, University of Tsukuba, Tsukuba, Ibaraki, Japan;(3) Department of Biology and Roy J. Carver Center for Comparative Genomics, University of Iowa, Iowa City, Iowa, USA;(4) Department of Biology, Chungnam National University, Daejeon, Korea
Abstract:

Background  

Gaining the ability to photosynthesize was a key event in eukaryotic evolution because algae and plants form the base of the food chain on our planet. The eukaryotic machines of photosynthesis are plastids (e.g., chloroplast in plants) that evolved from cyanobacteria through primary endosymbiosis. Our knowledge of plastid evolution, however, remains limited because the primary endosymbiosis occurred more than a billion years ago. In this context, the thecate "green amoeba" Paulinella chromatophora is remarkable because it very recently (i.e., minimum age of ≈ 60 million years ago) acquired a photosynthetic organelle (termed a "chromatophore"; i.e., plastid) via an independent primary endosymbiosis involving a Prochlorococcus or Synechococcus -like cyanobacterium. All data regarding P. chromatophora stem from a single isolate from Germany (strain M0880/a). Here we brought into culture a novel photosynthetic Paulinella strain (FK01) and generated molecular sequence data from these cells and from four different cell samples, all isolated from freshwater habitats in Japan. Our study had two aims. The first was to compare and contrast cell ultrastructure of the M0880/a and FK01 strains using scanning electron microscopy. The second was to assess the phylogenetic diversity of photosynthetic Paulinella to test the hypothesis they share a vertically inherited plastid that originated in their common ancestor.
Keywords:
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