Transcriptomic evidence for the expression of horizontally transferred algal nuclear genes in the photosynthetic sea slug, Elysia chlorotica.
Mol Biol Evol, 2012/6;29(6):1545-56.
Pierce SK[1], Fang X, Schwartz JA, Jiang X, Zhao W, Curtis NE, Kocot KM, Yang B, Wang J
Affiliations
PMID: 22319135DOI: 10.1093/molbev/msr316
Impact factor: 8.8
Abstract
Analysis of the transcriptome of the kleptoplastic sea slug, Elysia chlorotica, has revealed the presence of at least 101 chloroplast-encoded gene sequences and 111 transcripts matching 52 nuclear-encoded genes from the chloroplast donor, Vaucheria litorea. These data clearly show that the symbiotic chloroplasts are translationally active and, of even more interest, that a variety of functional algal genes have been transferred into the slug genome, as has been suggested by earlier indirect experiments. Both the chloroplast- and nuclear-encoded sequences were rare within the E. chlorotica transcriptome, suggesting that their copy numbers and synthesis rates are low, and required both a large amount of sequence data and native algal sequences to find. These results show that the symbiotic chloroplasts residing inside the host molluscan cell are maintained by an interaction of both organellar and host biochemistry directed by the presence of transferred genes.
MeSH terms
Animals; Base Sequence; Chlorophyta; Gastropoda; Gene Expression; Gene Expression Profiling; Gene Transfer, Horizontal; Genes, Chloroplast; Genome; Molecular Sequence Annotation; Molecular Sequence Data; Photosynthesis; RNA, Messenger; Sequence Analysis, DNA
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