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1.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 114(2): 239-244, 2017 01 10.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28069959

RESUMO

Domoic acid is a potent neurotoxin produced by certain marine microalgae that can accumulate in the foodweb, posing a health threat to human seafood consumers and wildlife in coastal regions worldwide. Evidence of climatic regulation of domoic acid in shellfish over the past 20 y in the Northern California Current regime is shown. The timing of elevated domoic acid is strongly related to warm phases of the Pacific Decadal Oscillation and the Oceanic Niño Index, an indicator of El Niño events. Ocean conditions in the northeast Pacific that are associated with warm phases of these indices, including changes in prevailing currents and advection of anomalously warm water masses onto the continental shelf, are hypothesized to contribute to increases in this toxin. We present an applied domoic acid risk assessment model for the US West Coast based on combined climatic and local variables. Evidence of regional- to basin-scale controls on domoic acid has not previously been presented. Our findings have implications in coastal zones worldwide that are affected by this toxin and are particularly relevant given the increased frequency of anomalously warm ocean conditions.


Assuntos
Bivalves , Clima , Ácido Caínico/análogos & derivados , Toxinas Marinhas/análise , Neurotoxinas/análise , Animais , California , Monitoramento Ambiental , Ácido Caínico/análise , Oregon , Frutos do Mar/análise , Washington
2.
Environ Sci Technol ; 48(3): 1803-10, 2014.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24377909

RESUMO

In situ fluorometers were deployed during the Deepwater Horizon (DWH) Gulf of Mexico oil spill to track the subsea oil plume. Uncertainties regarding instrument specifications and capabilities necessitated performance testing of sensors exposed to simulated, dispersed oil plumes. Dynamic ranges of the Chelsea Technologies Group AQUAtracka, Turner Designs Cyclops, Satlantic SUNA and WET Labs, Inc. ECO, exposed to fresh and artificially weathered crude oil, were determined. Sensors were standardized against known oil volumes and total petroleum hydrocarbons and benzene-toluene-ethylbenzene-xylene measurements-both collected during spills, providing oil estimates during wave tank dilution experiments. All sensors estimated oil concentrations down to 300 ppb oil, refuting previous reports. Sensor performance results assist interpretation of DWH oil spill data and formulating future protocols.


Assuntos
Monitoramento Ambiental/instrumentação , Poluição por Petróleo/análise , Petróleo/análise , Benzeno , Fluorometria/instrumentação , Hidrocarbonetos , México , Dispositivos Ópticos , Tolueno , Movimentos da Água , Tempo (Meteorologia) , Xilenos
3.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 64(3): 381-92, 2012 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22588203

RESUMO

In marine Synechococcus there is evidence for the adaptive evolution of spectrally distinct forms of the major light harvesting pigment phycoerythrin (PE). Recent research has suggested that these spectral forms of PE have a different evolutionary history than the core genome. However, a lack of explicit statistical testing of alternative hypotheses or for selection on these genes has made it difficult to evaluate the evolutionary relationships between spectral forms of PE or the role horizontal gene transfer (HGT) may have had in the adaptive phenotypic evolution of the pigment system in marine Synechococcus. In this work, PE phylogenies of picocyanobacteria with known spectral phenotypes, including newly co-isolated strains of marine Synechococcus from the Gulf of Mexico, were constructed to explore the diversification of spectral phenotype and PE evolution in this group more completely. For the first time, statistical evaluation of competing evolutionary hypotheses and tests for positive selection on the PE locus in picocyanobacteria were performed. Genes for PEs associated with specific PE spectral phenotypes formed strongly supported monophyletic clades within the PE tree with positive directional selection driving evolution towards higher phycourobilin (PUB) content. The presence of the PUB-lacking phenotype in PE-containing marine picocyanobacteria from cyanobacterial lineages identified as Cyanobium is best explained by HGT into this group from marine Synechococcus. Taken together, these data provide strong examples of adaptive evolution of a single phenotypic trait in bacteria via mutation, positive directional selection and horizontal gene transfer.


Assuntos
Evolução Biológica , Transferência Genética Horizontal , Ficoeritrina/genética , Synechococcus/genética , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Golfo do México , Fenótipo , Ficobilinas/análise , Ficoeritrina/análise , Filogenia , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Seleção Genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Synechococcus/classificação , Urobilina/análogos & derivados , Urobilina/análise
4.
Oecologia ; 70(2): 198-204, 1986 Sep.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28311658

RESUMO

Sedum wrightii is one of only a few species in the Crassulaceae for which there is evidence for a high degree of variability in the ratio of daytime to nighttime CO2 assimilation. There are both environmental and genetic components to this variability. S. wrightii grows over a wide altitudinal gradient. The purpose of this study was to compare low, intermediate, and high altitude populations with respect to the degree of CAM expression and the capability to tolerate limited water availability. We utilized clonallyreplicated genotypes of plants from each population in common environment greenhouse experiments. Genetic differences among the populations were found in long-term water use efficiency, in 24 hour CO2 exchange patterns, in biomass δ13C values, in carbon allocation, and in water status and ultimately survival during prolonged drought. The differences among the populations appear to be closely related to differences in the native habitats. The low altitude, desert plants had the greatest ability to grow and survive under conditions of limited water availability and appear to have the greatest shift to nighttime CO2 uptake during periods without water, while the high altitude plants had the poorest performance under these conditions and appear to shut down net carbon uptake when severely water limited.

5.
Genome Biol Evol ; 3: 601-13, 2011.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21697100

RESUMO

Gene duplication may be an important mechanism for the evolution of new functions and for the adaptive modulation of gene expression via dosage effects. Here, we analyzed the fate of gene duplicates for two strains of a novel group of cyanobacteria (genus Acaryochloris) that produces the far-red light absorbing chlorophyll d as its main photosynthetic pigment. The genomes of both strains contain an unusually high number of gene duplicates for bacteria. As has been observed for eukaryotic genomes, we find that the demography of gene duplicates can be well modeled by a birth-death process. Most duplicated Acaryochloris genes are of comparatively recent origin, are strain-specific, and tend to be located on different genetic elements. Analyses of selection on duplicates of different divergence classes suggest that a minority of paralogs exhibit near neutral evolutionary dynamics immediately following duplication but that most duplicate pairs (including those which have been retained for long periods) are under strong purifying selection against amino acid change. The likelihood of duplicate retention varied among gene functional classes, and the pronounced differences between strains in the pool of retained recent duplicates likely reflects differences in the nutrient status and other characteristics of their respective environments. We conclude that most duplicates are quickly purged from Acaryochloris genomes and that those which are retained likely make important contributions to organism ecology by conferring fitness benefits via gene dosage effects. The mechanism of enhanced duplication may involve homologous recombination between genetic elements mediated by paralogous copies of recA.


Assuntos
Clorofila/biossíntese , Cianobactérias/genética , Duplicação Gênica , Genoma Bacteriano/genética , Sequência de Aminoácidos , Cromossomos Bacterianos/genética , Mapeamento de Sequências Contíguas , Cianobactérias/classificação , Cianobactérias/metabolismo , DNA Bacteriano/química , DNA Bacteriano/genética , Ecossistema , Evolução Molecular , Genes Bacterianos/genética , Genes Duplicados/genética , Variação Genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Fases de Leitura Aberta/genética , Filogenia , Seleção Genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA , Homologia de Sequência de Aminoácidos , Especificidade da Espécie
6.
J Bacteriol ; 188(9): 3345-56, 2006 May.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-16621829

RESUMO

Chromatic adaptation (CA) in cyanobacteria has provided a model system for the study of the environmental control of photophysiology for several decades. All forms of CA that have been examined so far (types II and III) involve changes in the relative contents of phycoerythrin (PE) and/or phycocyanin when cells are shifted from red to green light and vice versa. However, the chromophore compositions of these polypeptides are not altered. Some marine Synechococcus species strains, which possess two PE forms (PEI and PEII), carry out another type of CA (type IV), occurring during shifts from blue to green or white light. Two chromatically adapting strains of marine Synechococcus recently isolated from the Gulf of Mexico were utilized to elucidate the mechanism of type IV CA. During this process, no change in the relative contents of PEI and PEII was observed. Instead, the ratio of the two chromophores bound to PEII, phycourobilin and phycoerythrobilin, is high under blue light and low under white light. Mass spectroscopy analyses of isolated PEII alpha- and beta-subunits show that there is a single PEII protein type under all light climates. The CA process seems to specifically affect the chromophorylation of the PEII (and possibly PEI) alpha chain. We propose a likely process for type IV CA, which involves the enzymatic activity of one or several phycobilin lyases and/or lyase-isomerases differentially controlled by the ambient light quality. Phylogenetic analyses based on the 16S rRNA gene confirm that type IV CA is not limited to a single clade of marine Synechococcus.


Assuntos
Complexos de Proteínas Captadores de Luz/metabolismo , Synechococcus/fisiologia , Adaptação Fisiológica , Proteínas de Bactérias/metabolismo , Luz , Liases/metabolismo , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Ficobilinas , Ficoeritrina/metabolismo , RNA Bacteriano/genética , RNA Ribossômico 16S/genética , Especificidade da Espécie , Synechococcus/classificação , Synechococcus/genética , Tetrapirróis/metabolismo , Urobilina/análogos & derivados , Urobilina/metabolismo
7.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 102(3): 850-5, 2005 Jan 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-15637160

RESUMO

Chlorophyll d-producing cyanobacteria are a recently described group of phototrophic bacteria that is a major focus of photosynthesis research, previously known only from marine environments in symbiosis with eukaryotes. We have discovered a free-living member of this group from a eutrophic hypersaline lake. Phylogenetic analyses indicated these strains are closely related to each other but not to prochlorophyte cyanobacteria that also use an alternative form of chlorophyll as the major light-harvesting pigment. We have also demonstrated that these bacteria acquired a fragment of the small-subunit rRNA gene encoding a conserved hairpin in the bacterial ribosome from a proteobacterial donor at least 10 million years before the present. Thus, our most widely used phylogenetic marker can be a mosaic of sequence fragments with widely divergent evolutionary histories.


Assuntos
Clorofila , Cianobactérias/genética , Evolução Molecular , Genes de RNAr , Proteobactérias/genética , Sequência de Bases , Quimera , Sequência Conservada , Marcadores Genéticos , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Conformação de Ácido Nucleico , Filogenia , Alinhamento de Sequência
8.
Appl Environ Microbiol ; 68(4): 1772-7, 2002 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-11916695

RESUMO

Thirty-two strains of phycoerythrin-containing marine picocyanobacteria were screened for the capacity to produce cyanophycin, a nitrogen storage compound synthesized by some, but not all, cyanobacteria. We found that one of these strains, Synechococcus sp. strain G2.1 from the Arabian Sea, was able to synthesize cyanophycin. The cyanophycin extracted from the cells was composed of roughly equimolar amounts of arginine and aspartate (29 and 35 mol%, respectively), as well as a small amount of glutamate (15 mol%). Phylogenetic analysis, based on partial 16S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequence data, showed that Synechococcus sp. strain G2.1 formed a well-supported clade with several strains of filamentous cyanobacteria. It was not closely related to several other well-studied marine picocyanobacteria, including Synechococcus strains PCC7002, WH7805, and WH8018 and Prochlorococcus sp. strain MIT9312. This is the first report of cyanophycin production in a phycoerythrin-containing strain of marine or halotolerant Synechococcus, and its discovery highlights the diversity of this ecologically important functional group.


Assuntos
Cianobactérias/genética , Ficoeritrina/análise , Filogenia , Proteínas de Plantas/biossíntese , Proteínas de Bactérias , Cianobactérias/química , Cianobactérias/metabolismo , Genes de RNAr , Microscopia Eletrônica , Dados de Sequência Molecular , RNA Ribossômico 16S , Análise de Sequência de DNA
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