4.7 Article

Genetic Diversity of Symbiotic Green Algae of Paramecium bursaria Syngens Originating from Distant Geographical Locations

Journal

PLANTS-BASEL
Volume 10, Issue 3, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/plants10030609

Keywords

Paramecium bursaria algal symbionts; chloroplast 3 ' rpl.36-5 ' infA genes; nuclear ITS1-5.8S rDNA-ITS2; 28S rDNA sequence

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Funding

  1. Pedagogical University of Krakow

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The study identified multiple green algal symbionts of Paramecium bursaria and found no correlation between the symbiotic species and the ciliate's syngen or geographic distribution, rejecting initial hypotheses.
Paramecium bursaria (Ehrenberg 1831) is a ciliate species living in a symbiotic relationship with green algae. The aim of the study was to identify green algal symbionts of P. bursaria originating from distant geographical locations and to answer the question of whether the occurrence of endosymbiont taxa was correlated with a specific ciliate syngen (sexually separated sibling group). In a comparative analysis, we investigated 43 P. bursaria symbiont strains based on molecular features. Three DNA fragments were sequenced: two from the nuclear genomes-a fragment of the ITS1-5.8S rDNA-ITS2 region and a fragment of the gene encoding large subunit ribosomal RNA (28S rDNA), as well as a fragment of the plastid genome comprising the 3 ' rpl36-5 ' infA genes. The analysis of two ribosomal sequences showed the presence of 29 haplotypes (haplotype diversity Hd = 0.98736 for ITS1-5.8S rDNA-ITS2 and Hd = 0.908 for 28S rDNA) in the former two regions, and 36 haplotypes in the 3 ' rpl36-5 ' infA gene fragment (Hd = 0.984). The following symbiotic strains were identified: Chlorella vulgaris, Chlorella variabilis, Chlorella sorokiniana and Micractinium conductrix. We rejected the hypotheses concerning (i) the correlation between P. bursaria syngen and symbiotic species, and (ii) the relationship between symbiotic species and geographic distribution.

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