The siphonous green algae are an assemblage of seaweeds that consist of a single giant cell. They comprise two sister orders, the Bryopsidales and Dasycladales. We infer the phylogenetic relationships among the siphonous green algae based on a five-locus data matrix and analyze temporal aspects of their diversification using relaxed molecular clock methods calibrated with the fossil record. The multi-locus approach resolves much of the previous phylogenetic uncertainty, but the radiation of families belonging to the core Halimedineae remains unresolved. In the Bryopsidales, three main clades were inferred, two of which correspond to previously described suborders (Bryopsidineae and Halimedineae) and a third lineage that contains only the limestone-boring genus Ostreobium. Relaxed molecular clock models indicate a Neoproterozoic origin of the siphonous green algae and a Paleozoic diversification of the orders into their families. The inferred node ages are used to resolve conflicting hypotheses about species ages in the tropical marine alga Halimeda.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ympev.2008.12.018 | DOI Listing |
Genome Res
September 2024
Melbourne Integrative Genomics, School of BioSciences, University of Melbourne, Parkville VIC 3010, Australia;
Structure
October 2023
Photosynthesis Research Center, Key Laboratory of Photobiology, Institute of Botany, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100093, China; China National Botanical Garden, Beijing 100093, China. Electronic address:
Light-harvesting complexes of photosystem II (LHCIIs) in green algae and plants are vital antenna apparatus for light harvesting, energy transfer, and photoprotection. Here we determined the structure of a siphonous-type LHCII trimer from the intertidal green alga Bryopsis corticulans by X-ray crystallography and cryo-electron microscopy (cryo-EM), and analyzed its functional properties by spectral analysis. The Bryopsis LHCII (Bry-LHCII) structures in both homotrimeric and heterotrimeric form show that green light-absorbing siphonaxanthin and siphonein occupied the sites of lutein and violaxanthin in plant LHCII, and two extra chlorophylls (Chls) b replaced Chls a.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMicroorganisms
May 2023
Molécules de Communication et Adaptation des Microorganismes (MCAM), Muséum National d'Histoire Naturelle (MNHN), CNRS (UMR7245), CP54, 63 Rue Buffon, 75005 Paris, France.
Microscopic filaments of the siphonous green algae (Ulvophyceae, Bryopsidales) colonize and dissolve the calcium carbonate skeletons of coral colonies in reefs of contrasted salinities. Here, we analyzed their bacterial community's composition and plasticity in response to salinity. Multiple cultures of coral-isolated strains from two distinct L lineages representative of IndoPacific environmental phylotypes were pre-acclimatized (>9 months) to three ecologically relevant reef salinities: 32.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlants (Basel)
October 2022
Department of Biology, University of Naples "Federico II", Via Cinthia, I-80126 Napoli, Italy.
are unconventional green algae composed of multinucleated, single siphonous cells. The species of are acquiring major scientific interest for both their invasion in the Mediterranean ecological niche and for the production of valuable natural metabolites. Furthermore, the abilities of spp.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAppl Plant Sci
August 2022
School of Life Sciences University of Hawai'i at Mānoa 616 St. John Plant Science Building, 3190 Maile Way Honolulu Hawai'i 96822 USA.
Premise: A novel control technique was developed to mitigate an invasive siphonous green alga, (Dichotomosiphonaceae), within a shallow degraded reef flat in O'ahu, Hawai'i.
Methods And Results: Replicated treatments of 3% and 10% hydrogen peroxide (HO) were administered into individual basal attachments of the bed-forming invasive seaweed on the Paikō reef, O'ahu. Relative electron transport rate maxima (rETR) were measured using a Walz Diving Pulse Amplitude Modulated Fluorometer in two replicate 100-m plots in 2020.
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