4.2 Article

The mitochondrial genome of the brown alga Laminaria digitata:: a comparative analysis

Journal

EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 37, Issue 2, Pages 163-172

Publisher

TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
DOI: 10.1017/S0967026202003542

Keywords

brown algae; evolution of mitochondria; heterokonts; Laminaria digitata; mitochondrial DNA

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We report here the complete sequence of the mitochondrial genome of the brown alga Laminaria digitata (Hudson) J.V. Lamouroux. L. digitata mtDNA is a circular molecule of 38,007 bp (64.9 % A+ T), encoding 63 genes and 3 ORFs and with only 6-7 % of non-coding sequences. Based on gene content and order, its overall organization is very similar to that of the mitochondrial genome of Pylaiella littoralis, another brown alga belonging to a different sublineage of the Phaeophyceae. In particular, the two genomes share unusual features, which hence could be unique to brown algae among the heterokont lineage, namely the presence of a rn5 gene, a short nad I I gene, a cox2 gene with a large in-frame insertion and alpha-proteobacterial-like promoter sequences. On the other hand, L. digitata lacks the sequences which are thought to have been transmitted horizontally to the P. littoralis genome, that is, the group-II introns in the rnl and cox1 genes, and it features only traces of an ancestral T7-like RNA polymerase. Distance phylogenetic trees inferred from concatenated mitochondrial genes confirm that speciation of brown algae occurred recently compared to other heterokonts.

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