Journal
PROTIST
Volume 171, Issue 5, Pages -Publisher
ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.protis.2020.125760
Keywords
Biomineralization; micropearls; Chlorodendrophyceae; Tetraselmis; intracellular mineral inclusion; chloroplast morphology
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Funding
- Societe Academique de Geneve [Requete 2017/66]
- Ernst and Lucie Schmidheiny Foundation
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Several species of the genus Tetraselmis (Chlorodendrophyceae, Chlorophyta) were recently discovered to possess unsuspected biomineralization capacities: they produce multiple intracellular inclusions of amorphous calcium carbonate (ACC), called micropearls. Early light-microscopists had spotted rows of refractive granules in some species, although without identifying their mineral nature. Scanning electron microscope (SEM) observations showed that the distribution of the micropearls in the cell forms a pattern, which appears to be characteristic for a given species. The present study shows that this pattern correlates with the shape of the chloroplast, which differs between Tetraselmis species, because micropearls align themselves along the incisions between chloroplast lobes. This was observed both by SEM and in live cells by light microscopy (LM) using Nomarski differential interference contrast. Additionally, molecular phylogenetic analyses, of rbcL and ITS2 gene sequences from diverse strains of Chlorodendrophyceae, corroborated the morphological observations by identifying two groups among nominal Tetraselmis spp. that differ in chloroplast morphology, micropearl arrangement, and ITS2 RNA secondary structure. (C) 2020 The Authors. Published by Elsevier GmbH.
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