4.5 Article

EVIDENCE OF ANCIENT GENOME REDUCTION IN RED ALGAE (RHODOPHYTA)

Journal

JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY
Volume 51, Issue 4, Pages 624-636

Publisher

WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12294

Keywords

flagella loss; genome reduction; GPI biosynthesis; horizontal gene transfer; Rhodophyta

Funding

  1. School of Environmental and Biological Sciences
  2. National Science Foundation [0936884, 1317114]
  3. Korean RDA Next-generation BioGreen21 [PJ009525]
  4. Marine Biotechnology Program - Ministry of Oceans and Fisheries [PJT200620]

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Red algae (Rhodophyta) comprise a monophyletic eukaryotic lineage of similar to 6,500 species with a fossil record that extends back 1.2 billion years. A surprising aspect of red algal evolution is that sequenced genomes encode a relatively limited gene inventory (similar to 5-10 thousand genes) when compared with other free-living algae or to other eukaryotes. This suggests that the common ancestor of red algae may have undergone extensive genome reduction, which can result from lineage specialization to a symbiotic or parasitic lifestyle or adaptation to an extreme or oligotrophic environment. We gathered genome and transcriptome data from a total of 14 red algal genera that represent the major branches of this phylum to study genome evolution in Rhodophyta. Analysis of orthologous gene gains and losses identifies two putative major phases of genome reduction: (i) in the stem lineage leading to all red algae resulting in the loss of major functions such as flagellae and basal bodies, the glycosylphosphatidylinositol anchor biosynthesis pathway, and the autophagy regulation pathway; and (ii) in the common ancestor of the extremophilic Cyanidiophytina. Red algal genomes are also characterized by the recruitment of hundreds of bacterial genes through horizontal gene transfer that have taken on multiple functions in shared pathways and have replaced eukaryotic gene homologs. Our results suggest that Rhodophyta may trace their origin to a gene depauperate ancestor. Unlike plants, it appears that a limited gene inventory is sufficient to support the diversification of a major eukaryote lineage that possesses sophisticated multicellular reproductive structures and an elaborate triphasic sexual cycle.

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