Chimeric origins of ochrophytes and haptophytes revealed through an ancient plastid proteome - Adaptation, Integration, Réticulation, Evolution Access content directly
Journal Articles eLife Year : 2017

Chimeric origins of ochrophytes and haptophytes revealed through an ancient plastid proteome

Abstract

Plastids are supported by a wide range of proteins encoded within the nucleus and imported from the cytoplasm. These plastid-targeted proteins may originate from the endosymbiont, the host, or other sources entirely. Here, we identify and characterise 770 plastid-targeted proteins that are conserved across the ochrophytes, a major group of algae including diatoms, pelagophytes and kelps, that possess plastids derived from red algae. We show that the ancestral ochrophyte plastid proteome was an evolutionary chimera, with 25% of its phylogenetically tractable proteins deriving from green algae. We additionally show that functional mixing of host and plastid proteomes, such as through dual targeting, is an ancestral feature of plastid evolution. Finally, we detect a clear phylogenetic signal from one ochrophyte subgroup, the lineage containing pelagophytes and dictyochophytes, in plastid-targeted proteins from another major algal lineage, the haptophytes. This may represent a possible serial endosymbiosis event deep in eukaryotic evolutionary history.
Fichier principal
Vignette du fichier
e23717-download.pdf (20.41 Mo) Télécharger le fichier
Origin : Publication funded by an institution

Dates and versions

hal-01526828 , version 1 (23-05-2017)

Licence

Attribution

Identifiers

Cite

Richard G Dorrell, Gillian Gile, Giselle Mccallum, Raphaël Méheust, Eric P Bapteste, et al.. Chimeric origins of ochrophytes and haptophytes revealed through an ancient plastid proteome. eLife, 2017, 6, pp.e23717. ⟨10.7554/eLife.23717⟩. ⟨hal-01526828⟩
588 View
244 Download

Altmetric

Share

Gmail Facebook X LinkedIn More