4.6 Article

Are Cyanobacteria an Ancestor of Chloroplasts or Just One of the Gene Donors for Plants and Algae?

Journal

GENES
Volume 12, Issue 6, Pages -

Publisher

MDPI
DOI: 10.3390/genes12060823

Keywords

chloroplast origin; cyanobacterial endosymbiosis; glycolipids; host-directed chloroplast formation; peptidoglycan; Paulinella chromatophore; phylogenetic analysis

Funding

  1. Japan Society for the Promotion of Science [17H03715]
  2. Grants-in-Aid for Scientific Research [17H03715] Funding Source: KAKEN

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The hypothesis that chloroplasts originated from cyanobacterial endosymbiosis has received support, but recent studies indicate that the relationship between chloroplasts and cyanobacteria may be more complex, involving multiple gene flows. Chloroplast formation in plants may not only be a single endosymbiotic event.
Chloroplasts of plants and algae are currently believed to originate from a cyanobacterial endosymbiont, mainly based on the shared proteins involved in the oxygenic photosynthesis and gene expression system. The phylogenetic relationship between the chloroplast and cyanobacterial genomes was important evidence for the notion that chloroplasts originated from cyanobacterial endosymbiosis. However, studies in the post-genomic era revealed that various substances (glycolipids, peptidoglycan, etc.) shared by cyanobacteria and chloroplasts are synthesized by different pathways or phylogenetically unrelated enzymes. Membranes and genomes are essential components of a cell (or an organelle), but the origins of these turned out to be different. Besides, phylogenetic trees of chloroplast-encoded genes suggest an alternative possibility that chloroplast genes could be acquired from at least three different lineages of cyanobacteria. We have to seriously examine that the chloroplast genome might be chimeric due to various independent gene flows from cyanobacteria. Chloroplast formation could be more complex than a single event of cyanobacterial endosymbiosis. I present the host-directed chloroplast formation hypothesis, in which the eukaryotic host cell that had acquired glycolipid synthesis genes as an adaptation to phosphate limitation facilitated chloroplast formation by providing glycolipid-based membranes (pre-adaptation). The origins of the membranes and the genome could be different, and the origin of the genome could be complex.

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