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.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1073/pnas.0405667102 | DOI Listing |
mBio
December 2024
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, Montana, USA.
The acquisition of new capabilities by horizontal gene transfer (HGT) shapes the distribution of traits during microbial diversification. In the Chlorophyll (Chl) -producing cyanobacterium , the genes involved in the production and disassembly of the light-harvesting phycobiliprotein phycocyanin (PC) were lost in the common ancestor but then subsequently regained via HGT in strain MBIC11017. However, it remains unknown how the HGT-acquired PC genes in MBIC11017 have been reintegrated into its existing regulatory network after tens of millions of years since their loss.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMol Ecol Resour
January 2024
Department of Life Science, National Taiwan University, Taipei, Taiwan.
Although most cyanobacteria use visible light (VL; λ = 400-700 nm) for photosynthesis, some have evolved strategies to use far-red light (FRL; λ = 700-800 nm). These cyanobacteria are defined as far-red light-utilizing cyanobacteria (FRLCyano), including two groups: (1) chlorophyll d-producing Acaryochloris spp. and (2) polyphyletic cyanobacteria that produce chlorophylls d and f in response to FRL.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
March 2022
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT 59812, USA.
The Chlorophyll -producing cyanobacterium is widely distributed in marine environments enriched in far-red light, but our understanding of its genomic and functional diversity is limited. Here, we take an integrative approach to investigate diversity for 37 strains, which includes twelve newly isolated strains from previously unsampled locations in Europe and the Pacific Northwest of North America. A genome-wide phylogeny revealed both that closely related have migrated within geographic regions and that distantly related lineages can co-occur.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCurr Biol
April 2021
Division of Biological Sciences, University of Montana, Missoula, MT, 59812, USA. Electronic address:
The evolution of phenotypic plasticity, i.e., the environmental induction of alternative phenotypes by the same genotype, can be an important mechanism of biological diversification.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFGenome Biol Evol
December 2011
Division of Biological Sciences, The University of Montana, USA.
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.
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