4.5 Article

Plastid Genomes and Proteins Illuminate the Evolution of Eustigmatophyte Algae and Their Bacterial Endosymbionts

Journal

GENOME BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION
Volume 11, Issue 2, Pages 362-379

Publisher

OXFORD UNIV PRESS
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evz004

Keywords

acyl carrier protein; Eustigmatophyceae; horizontal gene transfer; Ochrophyta; Phycorickettsia; plastid genome

Funding

  1. European Union's Horizon 2020 research and innovation program under the Marie Sklodowska-Curie grant [642575]
  2. ERD Funds [OPVVV CZ. 02.1.01/0.0/0.0/16_019/0000759]
  3. Czech Science Foundation [18-13458S]
  4. infrastructure grant Pristroje IET [CZ.1.05/2.1.00/19.0388]
  5. National Feasibility Programme I of the Czech Republic [LO1208]
  6. National Science Foundation [DEB1145414]
  7. Arkansas INBRE program through National Institute of General Medical Sciences of the National Institutes of Health [P20 GM103429]

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Eustigmatophytes, a class of stramenopile algae (ochrophytes), include not only the extensively studied biotechnologically important genus Nannochloropsis but also a rapidly expanding diversity of lineages with much less well characterized biology. Recent discoveries have led to exciting additions to our knowledge about eustigmatophytes. Some proved to harbor bacterial endosymbionts representing a novel genus, Candidatus Phycorickettsia, and an operon of unclear function (ebo) obtained by horizontal gene transfer from the endosymbiont lineage was found in the plastid genomes of still other eustigmatophytes. To shed more light on the latter event, as well as to generally improve our understanding of the eustigmatophyte evolutionary history, we sequenced plastid genomes of seven phylogenetically diverse representatives (including new isolates representing undescribed taxa). A phylogenomic analysis of plastid genome-encoded proteins resolved the phylogenetic relationships among the main eustigmatophyte lineages and provided a framework for the interpretation of plastid gene gains and losses in the group. The ebo operon gain was inferred to have probably occurred within the order Eustigmatales, after the divergence of the two basalmost lineages (a newly discovered hitherto undescribed strain and the Pseudellipsoidion group). When looking for nuclear genes potentially compensating for plastid gene losses, we noticed a gene for a plastid-targeted acyl carrier protein that was apparently acquired by horizontal gene transfer from Phycorickettsia. The presence of this gene in all eustigmatophytes studied, including representatives of both principal clades (Eustigmatales and Goniochloridales), is a genetic footprint indicating that the eustigmatophyte-Phycorickettsia partnership started no later than in the last eustigmatophyte common ancestor.

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