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1.
PLoS Biol ; 22(5): e3002608, 2024 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38713727

ABSTRACT

Algae and plants carry 2 organelles of endosymbiotic origin that have been co-evolving in their host cells for more than a billion years. The biology of plastids and mitochondria can differ significantly across major lineages and organelle changes likely accompanied the adaptation to new ecological niches such as the terrestrial habitat. Based on organelle proteome data and the genomes of 168 phototrophic (Archaeplastida) versus a broad range of 518 non-phototrophic eukaryotes, we screened for changes in plastid and mitochondrial biology across 1 billion years of evolution. Taking into account 331,571 protein families (or orthogroups), we identify 31,625 protein families that are unique to primary plastid-bearing eukaryotes. The 1,906 and 825 protein families are predicted to operate in plastids and mitochondria, respectively. Tracing the evolutionary history of these protein families through evolutionary time uncovers the significant remodeling the organelles experienced from algae to land plants. The analyses of gained orthogroups identifies molecular changes of organelle biology that connect to the diversification of major lineages and facilitated major transitions from chlorophytes en route to the global greening and origin of angiosperms.


Subject(s)
Magnoliopsida , Mitochondrial Proteins , Phylogeny , Plastids , Plastids/metabolism , Plastids/genetics , Magnoliopsida/genetics , Magnoliopsida/metabolism , Mitochondrial Proteins/metabolism , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Evolution, Molecular , Biological Evolution , Mitochondria/metabolism , Mitochondria/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Proteins/genetics , Proteome/metabolism , Symbiosis/genetics , Organelles/metabolism , Organelles/genetics
2.
J Exp Bot ; 73(13): 4291-4305, 2022 07 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35148385

ABSTRACT

Bryophytes are useful models for the study of plant evolution, development, plant-fungal symbiosis, stress responses, and gametogenesis. Additionally, their dominant haploid gametophytic phase makes them great models for functional genomics research, allowing straightforward genome editing and gene knockout via CRISPR or homologous recombination. Until 2016, however, the only bryophyte genome sequence published was that of Physcomitrium patens. Throughout recent years, several other bryophyte genomes and transcriptome datasets became available, enabling better comparative genomics in evolutionary studies. The increase in the number of bryophyte genome and transcriptome resources available has yielded a plethora of annotations, databases, and bioinformatics tools to access the new data, which covers the large diversity of this clade and whose biology comprises features such as association with arbuscular mycorrhiza fungi, sex chromosomes, low gene redundancy, or loss of RNA editing genes for organellar transcripts. Here we provide a guide to resources available for bryophytes with regards to genome and transcriptome databases and bioinformatics tools.


Subject(s)
Bryophyta , Transcriptome , Bryophyta/genetics , Computational Biology , Genomics , Phylogeny
3.
J Exp Bot ; 72(15): 5553-5568, 2021 07 28.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33989402

ABSTRACT

The kleptoplastic sea slug Elysia chlorotica consumes Vaucheria litorea, stealing its plastids, which then photosynthesize inside the animal cells for months. We investigated the properties of V. litorea plastids to understand how they withstand the rigors of photosynthesis in isolation. Transcription of specific genes in laboratory-isolated V. litorea plastids was monitored for 7 days. The involvement of plastid-encoded FtsH, a key plastid maintenance protease, in recovery from photoinhibition in V. litorea was estimated in cycloheximide-treated cells. In vitro comparison of V. litorea and spinach thylakoids was applied to investigate reactive oxygen species formation in V. litorea. In comparison to other tested genes, the transcripts of ftsH and translation elongation factor EF-Tu (tufA) decreased slowly in isolated V. litorea plastids. Higher levels of FtsH were also evident in cycloheximide-treated cells during recovery from photoinhibition. Charge recombination in PSII of V. litorea was found to be fine-tuned to produce only small quantities of singlet oxygen, and the plastids also contained reactive oxygen species-protective compounds. Our results support the view that the genetic characteristics of the plastids are crucial in creating a photosynthetic sea slug. The plastid's autonomous repair machinery is likely enhanced by low singlet oxygen production and elevated expression of FtsH.


Subject(s)
Gastropoda , Singlet Oxygen , Animals , Chloroplasts/metabolism , Gastropoda/genetics , Photosynthesis , Plastids , Singlet Oxygen/metabolism
4.
Proc Natl Acad Sci U S A ; 115(15): E3471-E3480, 2018 04 10.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29581286

ABSTRACT

Streptophytes are unique among photosynthetic eukaryotes in having conquered land. As the ancestors of land plants, streptophyte algae are hypothesized to have possessed exaptations to the environmental stressors encountered during the transition to terrestrial life. Many of these stressors, including high irradiance and drought, are linked to plastid biology. We have investigated global gene expression patterns across all six major streptophyte algal lineages, analyzing a total of around 46,000 genes assembled from a little more than 1.64 billion sequence reads from six organisms under three growth conditions. Our results show that streptophyte algae respond to cold and high light stress via expression of hallmark genes used by land plants (embryophytes) during stress-response signaling and downstream responses. Among the strongest differentially regulated genes were those associated with plastid biology. We observed that among streptophyte algae, those most closely related to land plants, especially Zygnema, invest the largest fraction of their transcriptional budget in plastid-targeted proteins and possess an array of land plant-type plastid-nucleus communication genes. Streptophyte algae more closely related to land plants also appear most similar to land plants in their capacity to respond to plastid stressors. Support for this notion comes from the detection of a canonical abscisic acid receptor of the PYRABACTIN RESISTANCE (PYR/PYL/RCAR) family in Zygnema, the first found outside the land plant lineage. We conclude that a fine-tuned response toward terrestrial plastid stressors was among the exaptations that allowed streptophytes to colonize the terrestrial habitat on a global scale.


Subject(s)
Streptophyta/metabolism , Stress, Physiological/physiology , Biological Evolution , Biological Phenomena , Cell Communication/physiology , Cell Nucleus/metabolism , Charophyceae/metabolism , Chlorophyta/metabolism , Embryophyta/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Phylogeny , Plants/metabolism , Plastids/metabolism , Plastids/physiology , Streptophyta/physiology
5.
Mol Biol Evol ; 36(4): 742-756, 2019 04 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30668797

ABSTRACT

The mitochondrial intermembrane space evolved from the bacterial periplasm. Presumably as a consequence of their common origin, most proteins of these compartments are stabilized by structural disulfide bonds. The molecular machineries that mediate oxidative protein folding in bacteria and mitochondria, however, appear to share no common ancestry. Here we tested whether the enzymes Erv1 and Mia40 of the yeast mitochondrial disulfide relay could be functionally replaced by corresponding components of other compartments. We found that the sulfhydryl oxidase Erv1 could be replaced by the Ero1 oxidase or the protein disulfide isomerase from the endoplasmic reticulum, however at the cost of respiration deficiency. In contrast to Erv1, the mitochondrial oxidoreductase Mia40 proved to be indispensable and could not be replaced by thioredoxin-like enzymes, including the cytoplasmic reductase thioredoxin, the periplasmic dithiol oxidase DsbA, and Pdi1. From our studies we conclude that the profound inertness against glutathione, its slow oxidation kinetics and its high affinity to substrates renders Mia40 a unique and essential component of mitochondrial biogenesis. Evidently, the development of a specific mitochondrial disulfide relay system represented a crucial step in the evolution of the eukaryotic cell.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Eukaryota/genetics , Mitochondria/enzymology , Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/metabolism , Cell Respiration , Disulfides , Escherichia coli , Eukaryota/metabolism , Glutathione/metabolism , Glycoproteins/metabolism , Mitochondrial Membrane Transport Proteins/genetics , Mitochondrial Precursor Protein Import Complex Proteins , Mitochondrial Proteins/genetics , Mitochondrial Proteins/metabolism , Organelle Biogenesis , Oxidation-Reduction , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/genetics , Oxidoreductases Acting on Sulfur Group Donors/metabolism , Protein Disulfide-Isomerases/metabolism , Saccharomyces cerevisiae , Saccharomyces cerevisiae Proteins/genetics , Thioredoxins/metabolism
6.
J Cell Sci ; 131(2)2018 01 29.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28893840

ABSTRACT

Plastids in plants and algae evolved from the endosymbiotic integration of a cyanobacterium by a heterotrophic eukaryote. New plastids can only emerge through fission; thus, the synchronization of bacterial division with the cell cycle of the eukaryotic host was vital to the origin of phototrophic eukaryotes. Most of the sampled algae house a single plastid per cell and basal-branching relatives of polyplastidic lineages are all monoplastidic, as are some non-vascular plants during certain stages of their life cycle. In this Review, we discuss recent advances in our understanding of the molecular components necessary for plastid division, including those of the peptidoglycan wall (of which remnants were recently identified in moss), in a wide range of phototrophic eukaryotes. Our comparison of the phenotype of 131 species harbouring plastids of either primary or secondary origin uncovers that one prerequisite for an algae or plant to house multiple plastids per nucleus appears to be the loss of the bacterial genes minD and minE from the plastid genome. The presence of a single plastid whose division is coupled to host cytokinesis was a prerequisite of plastid emergence. An escape from such a monoplastidic bottleneck succeeded rarely and appears to be coupled to the evolution of additional layers of control over plastid division and a complex morphology. The existence of a quality control checkpoint of plastid transmission remains to be demonstrated and is tied to understanding the monoplastidic bottleneck.


Subject(s)
Biological Evolution , Plants/metabolism , Plastids/metabolism , Inheritance Patterns/genetics , Mitochondria/genetics , Symbiosis/genetics
7.
New Phytol ; 222(2): 1043-1053, 2019 04.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-30565261

ABSTRACT

To obtain insights into the dynamics of nutrient exchange in arbuscular mycorrhizal (AM) symbiosis, we modelled mathematically the two-membrane system at the plant-fungus interface and simulated its dynamics. In computational cell biology experiments, the full range of nutrient transport pathways was tested for their ability to exchange phosphorus (P)/carbon (C)/nitrogen (N) sources. As a result, we obtained a thermodynamically justified, independent and comprehensive model of the dynamics of the nutrient exchange at the plant-fungus contact zone. The predicted optimal transporter network coincides with the transporter set independently confirmed in wet-laboratory experiments previously, indicating that all essential transporter types have been discovered. The thermodynamic analyses suggest that phosphate is released from the fungus via proton-coupled phosphate transporters rather than anion channels. Optimal transport pathways, such as cation channels or proton-coupled symporters, shuttle nutrients together with a positive charge across the membranes. Only in exceptional cases does electroneutral transport via diffusion facilitators appear to be plausible. The thermodynamic models presented here can be generalized and adapted to other forms of mycorrhiza and open the door for future studies combining wet-laboratory experiments with computational simulations to obtain a deeper understanding of the investigated phenomena.


Subject(s)
Mycorrhizae/metabolism , Nitrogen/metabolism , Phosphorus/metabolism , Symbiosis , Biological Transport , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Models, Biological , Thermodynamics
8.
Plant Cell Environ ; 41(11): 2530-2548, 2018 11.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29314046

ABSTRACT

Plants sense and respond to microbes utilizing a multilayered signalling cascade. In seed plants, the phytohormones jasmonic and salicylic acid (JA and SA) are key denominators of how plants respond to certain microbes. Their interplay is especially well-known for tipping the scales in plants' strategies of dealing with phytopathogens. In non-angiosperm lineages, the interplay is less well understood, but current data indicate that it is intertwined to a lesser extent and the canonical JA/SA antagonism appears to be absent. Here, we used the water fern Azolla filiculoides to gain insights into the fern's JA/SA signalling and the molecular communication with its unique nitrogen fixing cyanobiont Nostoc azollae, which the fern inherits both during sexual and vegetative reproduction. By mining large-scale sequencing data, we demonstrate that Azolla has most of the genetic repertoire to produce and sense JA and SA. Using qRT-PCR on the identified biosynthesis and signalling marker genes, we show that Azolla is responsive to exogenously applied SA. Furthermore, exogenous SA application influenced the abundance and gene expression of Azolla's cyanobiont. Our data provide a framework for JA/SA signalling in ferns and suggest that SA might be involved in Azolla's communication with its vertically inherited cyanobiont.


Subject(s)
Cyclopentanes/metabolism , Ferns/metabolism , Nostoc/metabolism , Oxylipins/metabolism , Plant Growth Regulators/metabolism , Salicylic Acid/metabolism , Ferns/genetics , Gene Expression Regulation, Plant , Nitrogen Fixation , Phylogeny , Plant Proteins/genetics , Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plant Proteins/physiology , Real-Time Polymerase Chain Reaction , Signal Transduction , Symbiosis
9.
Plant Cell ; 27(7): 1827-33, 2015 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25818624

ABSTRACT

A pivotal step in the transformation of an endosymbiotic cyanobacterium to a plastid some 1.5 billion years ago was the evolution of a protein import apparatus, the TOC/TIC machinery, in the common ancestor of Archaeplastida. Recently, a putative new TIC member was identified in Arabidopsis thaliana: TIC214. This finding is remarkable for a number of reasons: (1) TIC214 is encoded by ycf1, so it would be the first plastid-encoded protein of this apparatus; (2) ycf1 is unique to the green lineage (Chloroplastida) but entirely lacking in glaucophytes (Glaucophyta) and the red lineage (Rhodophyta) of the Archaeplastida; (3) ycf1 has been shown to be one of the few indispensable plastid genes (aside from the ribosomal machinery), yet it is missing in the grasses; and (4) 30 years of previous TOC/TIC research missed it. These observations prompted us to survey the evolution of ycf1. We found that ycf1 is not only lacking in grasses and some parasitic plants, but also for instance in cranberry (Ericaceae). The encoded YCF proteins are highly variable, both in sequence length and in the predicted number of N-terminal transmembrane domains. The evolution of the TOC/TIC machinery in the green lineage experienced specific modifications, but our analysis does not support YCF1 to be a general green TIC. It remains to be explained how the apparent complete loss of YCF1 can be tolerated by some embryophytes and whether what is observed for YCF1 function in a member of the Brassicaceae is also true for, e.g., algal and noncanonical YCF1 homologs.


Subject(s)
Plant Proteins/metabolism , Plants/metabolism , Evolution, Molecular , Genetic Variation , Phylogeny , Plastids/genetics
10.
Bioessays ; 38(9): 850-6, 2016 09.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-27339178

ABSTRACT

Metagenomics bears upon all aspects of microbiology, including our understanding of mitochondrial and eukaryote origin. Recently, ribosomal protein phylogenies show the eukaryote host lineage - the archaeal lineage that acquired the mitochondrion - to branch within the archaea. Metagenomic studies are now uncovering new archaeal lineages that branch more closely to the host than any cultivated archaea do. But how do they grow? Carbon and energy metabolism as pieced together from metagenome assemblies of these new archaeal lineages, such as the Deep Sea Archaeal Group (including Lokiarchaeota) and Bathyarchaeota, do not match the physiology of any cultivated microbes. Understanding how these new lineages live in their environment is important, and might hold clues about how mitochondria arose and how the eukaryotic lineage got started. Here we look at these exciting new metagenomic studies, what they say about archaeal physiology in modern environments, how they impact views on host-mitochondrion physiological interactions at eukaryote origin.


Subject(s)
Archaea/genetics , Energy Metabolism , Eukaryota/genetics , Metagenomics , Mitochondria , Phylogeny , Eukaryota/metabolism
11.
New Phytol ; 214(3): 1132-1144, 2017 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-28152190

ABSTRACT

Phototrophic organisms need to ensure high photosynthetic performance whilst suppressing reactive oxygen species (ROS)-induced stress occurring under excess light conditions. The xanthophyll cycle (XC), related to the high-energy quenching component (qE) of the nonphotochemical quenching (NPQ) of excitation energy, is considered to be an obligatory component of photoprotective mechanisms. The pigment composition of at least one representative of each major clade of Ulvophyceae (Chlorophyta) was investigated. We searched for a light-dependent conversion of pigments and investigated the NPQ capacity with regard to the contribution of XC and the qE component when grown under different light conditions. A XC was found to be absent in a monophyletic group of Ulvophyceae, the Bryopsidales, when cultivated under low light, but was triggered in one of the 10 investigated bryopsidalean species, Caulerpa cf. taxifolia, when cultivated under high light. Although Bryopsidales accumulate zeaxanthin (Zea) under high-light (HL) conditions, NPQ formation is independent of a XC and not related to qE. qE- and XC-independent NPQ in the Bryopsidales contradicts the common perception regarding its ubiquitous occurrence in Chloroplastida. Zea accumulation in HL-acclimated Bryopsidales most probably represents a remnant of a functional XC. The existence of a monophyletic algal taxon that lacks qE highlights the need for broad biodiversity studies on photoprotective mechanisms.


Subject(s)
Chlorophyta/physiology , Photochemical Processes , Phylogeny , Chlorophyta/growth & development , Chlorophyta/radiation effects , Darkness , Light , Stress, Physiological/radiation effects , Thermodynamics , Xanthophylls/metabolism , Zeaxanthins
12.
Eukaryot Cell ; 14(12): 1264-75, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26475173

ABSTRACT

Mitochondrial evolution entailed the origin of protein import machinery that allows nuclear-encoded proteins to be targeted to the organelle, as well as the origin of cleavable N-terminal targeting sequences (NTS) that allow efficient sorting and import of matrix proteins. In hydrogenosomes and mitosomes, reduced forms of mitochondria with reduced proteomes, NTS-independent targeting of matrix proteins is known. Here, we studied the cellular localization of two glycolytic enzymes in the anaerobic pathogen Trichomonas vaginalis: PPi-dependent phosphofructokinase (TvPPi-PFK), which is the main glycolytic PFK activity of the protist, and ATP-dependent PFK (TvATP-PFK), the function of which is less clear. TvPPi-PFK was detected predominantly in the cytosol, as expected, while all four TvATP-PFK paralogues were imported into T. vaginalis hydrogenosomes, although none of them possesses an NTS. The heterologous expression of TvATP-PFK in Saccharomyces cerevisiae revealed an intrinsic capability of the protein to be recognized and imported into yeast mitochondria, whereas yeast ATP-PFK resides in the cytosol. TvATP-PFK consists of only a catalytic domain, similarly to "short" bacterial enzymes, while ScATP-PFK includes an N-terminal extension, a catalytic domain, and a C-terminal regulatory domain. Expression of the catalytic domain of ScATP-PFK and short Escherichia coli ATP-PFK in T. vaginalis resulted in their partial delivery to hydrogenosomes. These results indicate that TvATP-PFK and the homologous ATP-PFKs possess internal structural targeting information that is recognized by the hydrogenosomal import machinery. From an evolutionary perspective, the predisposition of ancient ATP-PFK to be recognized and imported into hydrogenosomes might be a relict from the early phases of organelle evolution.


Subject(s)
Hydrogen/metabolism , Organelles/metabolism , Phosphofructokinases/chemistry , Phosphofructokinases/metabolism , Trichomonas vaginalis/enzymology , Adenosine Triphosphate/pharmacology , Amino Acid Sequence , Diphosphates/metabolism , Ferredoxins/metabolism , Mitochondria/drug effects , Mitochondria/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Organelles/drug effects , Phylogeny , Promoter Regions, Genetic/genetics , Protein Transport/drug effects , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/drug effects , Saccharomyces cerevisiae/metabolism , Sequence Alignment , Trichomonas vaginalis/drug effects
13.
Proc Biol Sci ; 282(1802)2015 Mar 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25652835

ABSTRACT

The only animal cells known that can maintain functional plastids (kleptoplasts) in their cytosol occur in the digestive gland epithelia of sacoglossan slugs. Only a few species of the many hundred known can profit from kleptoplasty during starvation long-term, but why is not understood. The two sister taxa Elysia cornigera and Elysia timida sequester plastids from the same algal species, but with a very different outcome: while E. cornigera usually dies within the first two weeks when deprived of food, E. timida can survive for many months to come. Here we compare the responses of the two slugs to starvation, blocked photosynthesis and light stress. The two species respond differently, but in both starvation is the main denominator that alters global gene expression profiles. The kleptoplasts' ability to fix CO2 decreases at a similar rate in both slugs during starvation, but only E. cornigera individuals die in the presence of functional kleptoplasts, concomitant with the accumulation of reactive oxygen species (ROS) in the digestive tract. We show that profiting from the acquisition of robust plastids, and key to E. timida's longer survival, is determined by an increased starvation tolerance that keeps ROS levels at bay.


Subject(s)
Gastropoda/physiology , Plastids/metabolism , Animals , Energy Metabolism , Gastropoda/metabolism , Gastropoda/radiation effects , Light , Photosynthesis , Plastids/radiation effects , Reactive Oxygen Species/metabolism , Species Specificity , Starvation , Transcriptome
14.
Mol Phylogenet Evol ; 93: 55-62, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26220839

ABSTRACT

Symbiotic associations are of broad significance in evolution and biodiversity. Green Hydra is a classic example of endosymbiosis. In its gastrodermal myoepithelial cells it harbors endosymbiotic unicellular green algae, most commonly from the genus Chlorella. We reconstructed the phylogeny of cultured algal endosymbionts isolated and maintained in laboratory conditions for years from green Hydra strains collected from four different geographical sites within Croatia, one from Germany and one from Israel. Nuclear (18S rDNA, ITS region) and chloroplast markers (16S, rbcL) for maximum likelihood phylogenetic analyses were used. We focused on investigating the positions of these algal endosymbiotic strains within the chlorophyte lineage. Molecular analyses established that different genera and species of unicellular green algae are present as endosymbionts in green Hydra, showing that endosymbiotic algae growing within green Hydra sampled from four Croatian localities are not monophyletic. Our results indicate that the intracellular algal endosymbionts of green Hydra have become established several times independently in evolution.


Subject(s)
Chlorella/genetics , Hydra/genetics , Phylogeny , Symbiosis/genetics , Animals , Cell Nucleus/genetics , Chloroplasts/genetics , DNA, Intergenic/genetics , Polymerase Chain Reaction , RNA, Ribosomal, 16S/genetics , Species Specificity
15.
J Eukaryot Microbiol ; 62(5): 694-700, 2015.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25847055

ABSTRACT

Proteins with membrane occupation and recognition nexus (MORN) motifs are associated with cell fission in apicomplexan parasites, chloroplast division in Arabidopsis and the motility of sperm cells. We found that ciliates are among those that encode the largest variety of MORN proteins. Tetrahymena thermophila expresses 129 MORN protein-encoding genes, some of which are specifically up-regulated during conjugation. A lipid-binding assay underpins the assumption that the predominant function of MORN motifs themselves is to confer the ability of lipid binding. The localisation of four MORN candidate proteins with similar characteristics highlights the functional diversity of this group especially in ciliates.


Subject(s)
Amino Acid Motifs , Membrane Proteins/chemistry , Membrane Proteins/metabolism , Protozoan Proteins/chemistry , Protozoan Proteins/metabolism , Tetrahymena thermophila/chemistry , Tetrahymena thermophila/metabolism , Amino Acid Sequence , Lipid Metabolism , Membrane Proteins/isolation & purification , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Protozoan Proteins/isolation & purification , Tetrahymena thermophila/genetics
16.
BMC Genomics ; 15: 906, 2014 Oct 17.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25326207

ABSTRACT

BACKGROUND: The human pathogen Trichomonas vaginalis is a parabasalian flagellate that is estimated to infect 3% of the world's population annually. With a 160 megabase genome and up to 60,000 genes residing in six chromosomes, the parasite has the largest genome among sequenced protists. Although it is thought that the genome size and unusual large coding capacity is owed to genome duplication events, the exact reason and its consequences are less well studied. RESULTS: Among transcriptome data we found thousands of instances, in which reads mapped onto genomic loci not annotated as genes, some reaching up to several kilobases in length. At first sight these appear to represent long non-coding RNAs (lncRNAs), however, about half of these lncRNAs have significant sequence similarities to genomic loci annotated as protein-coding genes. This provides evidence for the transcription of hundreds of pseudogenes in the parasite. Conventional lncRNAs and pseudogenes are expressed in Trichomonas through their own transcription start sites and independently from flanking genes in Trichomonas. Expression of several representative lncRNAs was verified through reverse-transcriptase PCR in different T. vaginalis strains and case studies exclude the use of alternative start codons or stop codon suppression for the genes analysed. CONCLUSION: Our results demonstrate that T. vaginalis expresses thousands of intergenic loci, including numerous transcribed pseudogenes. In contrast to yeast these are expressed independently from neighbouring genes. Our results furthermore illustrate the effect genome duplication events can have on the transcriptome of a protist. The parasite's genome is in a steady state of changing and we hypothesize that the numerous lncRNAs could offer a large pool for potential innovation from which novel proteins or regulatory RNA units could evolve.


Subject(s)
Pseudogenes , RNA, Long Noncoding/genetics , RNA, Protozoan/genetics , Trichomonas vaginalis/genetics , Gene Duplication , Gene Expression Profiling , Sequence Analysis, RNA
17.
Proc Biol Sci ; 281(1774): 20132493, 2014 Jan 07.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24258718

ABSTRACT

Several sacoglossan sea slugs (Plakobranchoidea) feed upon plastids of large unicellular algae. Four species--called long-term retention (LtR) species--are known to sequester ingested plastids within specialized cells of the digestive gland. There, the stolen plastids (kleptoplasts) remain photosynthetically active for several months, during which time LtR species can survive without additional food uptake. Kleptoplast longevity has long been puzzling, because the slugs do not sequester algal nuclei that could support photosystem maintenance. It is widely assumed that the slugs survive starvation by means of kleptoplast photosynthesis, yet direct evidence to support that view is lacking. We show that two LtR plakobranchids, Elysia timida and Plakobranchus ocellatus, incorporate (14)CO2 into acid-stable products 60- and 64-fold more rapidly in the light than in the dark, respectively. Despite this light-dependent CO2 fixation ability, light is, surprisingly, not essential for the slugs to survive starvation. LtR animals survived several months of starvation (i) in complete darkness and (ii) in the light in the presence of the photosynthesis inhibitor monolinuron, all while not losing weight faster than the control animals. Contrary to current views, sacoglossan kleptoplasts seem to be slowly digested food reserves, not a source of solar power.


Subject(s)
Energy Metabolism/radiation effects , Gastropoda/physiology , Light , Plastids/metabolism , Animals , Body Weight , Darkness , Digestion/physiology , Gastropoda/metabolism , Gastropoda/radiation effects , Gastropoda/ultrastructure , Photosynthesis/drug effects , Photosynthesis/radiation effects , Phylogeny , Species Specificity
18.
Cell Microbiol ; 15(10): 1707-21, 2013 Oct.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23530917

ABSTRACT

Trichomonas vaginalis is the most widespread non-viral pathogen of the human urogenital tract, infecting ∼ 3% of the world's population annually. At the onset of infection the protist changes morphology within minutes: the flagellated free-swimming cell converts into the amoeboid-adherent stage. The molecular machinery of this process is not well studied, but is thought to involve actin reorganization. We have characterized amoeboid transition, focusing in particular on TvFim1, the only expressed protein of the fimbrin family in Trichomonas. Addition of TvFim1 to actin polymerization assays increases the speed of actin filament assembly and results in bundling of F-actin in a parallel and anti-parallel manner. Upon contact with vaginal epithelial cells, the otherwise diffuse localization of actin and TvFim1 changes dramatically. In the amoeboid TvFim1 associates with fibrous actin bundles and concentrates at protrusive structures opposing the trailing ends of the gliding amoeboid form and rapidly redistributes together with actin to form distinct clusters. Live cell imaging demonstrates that Trichomonas amoeboid stages do not just adhere to host tissue, rather they actively migrate across human epithelial cells. They do so in a concerted manner, with an average speed of 20 µm min(-1) and often using their flagella and apical tip as the leading edge.


Subject(s)
Actins/metabolism , Flagella/physiology , Locomotion , Membrane Glycoproteins/metabolism , Microfilament Proteins/metabolism , Trichomonas vaginalis/physiology , Cell Adhesion , Cell Line , Epithelial Cells/parasitology , Gene Expression Profiling , Humans , Membrane Glycoproteins/chemistry , Membrane Glycoproteins/genetics , Microfilament Proteins/chemistry , Microfilament Proteins/genetics , Models, Molecular , Protein Conformation , Protein Multimerization
19.
Front Zool ; 11(1): 5, 2014 Jan 16.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-24428892

ABSTRACT

INTRODUCTION: The Mediterranean sacoglossan Elysia timida is one of the few sea slug species with the ability to sequester chloroplasts from its food algae and to subsequently store them in a functional state in the digestive gland cells for more than a month, during which time the plastids retain high photosynthetic activity (= long-term retention). Adult E. timida have been described to feed on the unicellular alga Acetabularia acetabulum in their natural environment. The suitability of E. timida as a laboratory model culture system including its food source was studied. RESULTS: In contrast to the literature reporting that juvenile E. timida feed on Cladophora dalmatica first, and later on switch to the adult diet A. acetabulum, the juveniles in this study fed directly on A. acetabulum (young, non-calcified stalks); they did not feed on the various Cladophora spp. (collected from the sea or laboratory culture) offered. This could possibly hint to cryptic speciation with no clear morphological differences, but incipient ecological differentiation. Transmission electron microscopy of chloroplasts from A. acetabulum after initial intake by juvenile E. timida showed different states of degradation - in conglomerations or singularly - and fragments of phagosome membranes, but differed from kleptoplast images of C. dalmatica in juvenile E. timida from the literature. Based on the finding that the whole life cycle of E. timida can be completed with A. acetabulum as the sole food source, a laboratory culture system was established. An experiment with PAM-fluorometry showed that cultured E. timida are also able to store chloroplasts in long-term retention from Acetabularia peniculus, which stems from the Indo-Pacific and is not abundant in the natural environment of E. timida. Variations between three experiment groups indicated potential influences of temperature on photosynthetic capacities. CONCLUSIONS: E. timida is a viable laboratory model system to study photosynthesis in incorporated chloroplasts (kleptoplasts). Capacities of chloroplast incorporation in E. timida were investigated in a closed laboratory culture system with two different chloroplast donors and over extended time periods about threefold longer than previously reported.

20.
Eukaryot Cell ; 12(6): 932-40, 2013 Jun.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23606287

ABSTRACT

Alveolins are a recently described class of proteins common to all members of the superphylum Alveolata that are characterized by conserved charged repeat motifs (CRMs) but whose exact function remains unknown. We have analyzed the smaller of the two alveolins of Tetrahymena thermophila, TtALV2. The protein localizes to dispersed, broken patches arranged between the rows of the longitudinal microtubules. Macronuclear knockdown of Ttalv2 leads to multinuclear cells with no apparent cell polarity and randomly occurring cell protrusions, either by interrupting pellicle integrity or by disturbing cytokinesis. Correct association of TtALV2 with the alveoli or the pellicle is complex and depends on both the termini as well as the charged repeat motifs of the protein. Proteins containing similar CRMs are a dominant part of the ciliate membrane cytoskeleton, suggesting that these motifs may play a more general role in mediating membrane attachment and/or cytoskeletal association. To better understand their integration into the cytoskeleton, we localized a range of CRM-based fusion proteins, which suggested there is an inherent tendency for proteins with CRMs to be located in the peripheral cytoskeleton, some nucleating as filaments at the basal bodies. Even a synthetic protein, mimicking the charge and repeat pattern of these proteins, directed a reporter protein to a variety of peripheral cytoskeletal structures in Tetrahymena. These motifs might provide a blueprint for membrane and cytoskeleton affiliation in the complex pellicles of Alveolata.


Subject(s)
Cell Membrane/genetics , Cytoskeleton/genetics , Metalloendopeptidases/genetics , Protozoan Proteins/genetics , Tetrahymena thermophila/genetics , Amino Acid Motifs , Cell Membrane/metabolism , Cell Membrane/ultrastructure , Cell Polarity , Cytoskeleton/metabolism , Cytoskeleton/ultrastructure , Gene Expression , Metalloendopeptidases/metabolism , Molecular Sequence Data , Protein Isoforms/genetics , Protein Isoforms/metabolism , Protein Structure, Tertiary , Protein Transport , Protozoan Proteins/metabolism , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/genetics , Recombinant Fusion Proteins/metabolism , Signal Transduction , Tetrahymena thermophila/metabolism , Tetrahymena thermophila/ultrastructure
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