Cargando…

The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids

Euglenids are a group of protists that comprises species with diverse feeding modes. One distinct and diversified clade of euglenids is photoautotrophic, and its members bear green secondary plastids. In this paper we present the plastid genome of the euglenid Eutreptiella, which we assembled from 4...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hrdá, Štěpánka, Fousek, Jan, Szabová, Jana, Hampl, Vladimír, Vlček, Čestmír
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3308993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22448269
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033746
_version_ 1782227470730133504
author Hrdá, Štěpánka
Fousek, Jan
Szabová, Jana
Hampl, Vladimír
Vlček, Čestmír
author_facet Hrdá, Štěpánka
Fousek, Jan
Szabová, Jana
Hampl, Vladimír
Vlček, Čestmír
author_sort Hrdá, Štěpánka
collection PubMed
description Euglenids are a group of protists that comprises species with diverse feeding modes. One distinct and diversified clade of euglenids is photoautotrophic, and its members bear green secondary plastids. In this paper we present the plastid genome of the euglenid Eutreptiella, which we assembled from 454 sequencing of Eutreptiella gDNA. Comparison of this genome and the only other available plastid genomes of photosynthetic euglenid, Euglena gracilis, revealed that they contain a virtually identical set of 57 protein coding genes, 24 genes fewer than the genome of Pyramimonas parkeae, the closest extant algal relative of the euglenid plastid. Searching within the transcriptomes of Euglena and Eutreptiella showed that 6 of the missing genes were transferred to the nucleus of the euglenid host while 18 have been probably lost completely. Euglena and Eutreptiella represent the deepest bifurcation in the photosynthetic clade, and therefore all these gene transfers and losses must have happened before the last common ancestor of all known photosynthetic euglenids. After the split of Euglena and Eutreptiella only one additional gene loss took place. The conservation of gene content in the two lineages of euglenids is in contrast to the variability of gene order and intron counts, which diversified dramatically. Our results show that the early secondary plastid of euglenids was much more susceptible to gene losses and endosymbiotic gene transfers than the established plastid, which is surprisingly resistant to changes in gene content.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-3308993
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2012
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-33089932012-03-23 The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids Hrdá, Štěpánka Fousek, Jan Szabová, Jana Hampl, Vladimír Vlček, Čestmír PLoS One Research Article Euglenids are a group of protists that comprises species with diverse feeding modes. One distinct and diversified clade of euglenids is photoautotrophic, and its members bear green secondary plastids. In this paper we present the plastid genome of the euglenid Eutreptiella, which we assembled from 454 sequencing of Eutreptiella gDNA. Comparison of this genome and the only other available plastid genomes of photosynthetic euglenid, Euglena gracilis, revealed that they contain a virtually identical set of 57 protein coding genes, 24 genes fewer than the genome of Pyramimonas parkeae, the closest extant algal relative of the euglenid plastid. Searching within the transcriptomes of Euglena and Eutreptiella showed that 6 of the missing genes were transferred to the nucleus of the euglenid host while 18 have been probably lost completely. Euglena and Eutreptiella represent the deepest bifurcation in the photosynthetic clade, and therefore all these gene transfers and losses must have happened before the last common ancestor of all known photosynthetic euglenids. After the split of Euglena and Eutreptiella only one additional gene loss took place. The conservation of gene content in the two lineages of euglenids is in contrast to the variability of gene order and intron counts, which diversified dramatically. Our results show that the early secondary plastid of euglenids was much more susceptible to gene losses and endosymbiotic gene transfers than the established plastid, which is surprisingly resistant to changes in gene content. Public Library of Science 2012-03-20 /pmc/articles/PMC3308993/ /pubmed/22448269 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033746 Text en Hrdá et al. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Hrdá, Štěpánka
Fousek, Jan
Szabová, Jana
Hampl, Vladimír
Vlček, Čestmír
The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids
title The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids
title_full The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids
title_fullStr The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids
title_full_unstemmed The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids
title_short The Plastid Genome of Eutreptiella Provides a Window into the Process of Secondary Endosymbiosis of Plastid in Euglenids
title_sort plastid genome of eutreptiella provides a window into the process of secondary endosymbiosis of plastid in euglenids
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3308993/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22448269
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0033746
work_keys_str_mv AT hrdastepanka theplastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT fousekjan theplastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT szabovajana theplastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT hamplvladimir theplastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT vlcekcestmir theplastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT hrdastepanka plastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT fousekjan plastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT szabovajana plastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT hamplvladimir plastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids
AT vlcekcestmir plastidgenomeofeutreptiellaprovidesawindowintotheprocessofsecondaryendosymbiosisofplastidineuglenids