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April
30, 2007
FIRST GENOME
COMPARISON OF PLANKTON SPECIES YIELDS SURPRISES UNDERLYING KEY OCEAN
PROCESSES
An
international team of scientists led by Scripps Institution of
Oceanography at
UC San Diego and the Department of Energy's (DOE) Joint Genome
Institute has
peered into the genetic makeup of two species of phytoplankton, the
tiny plants
key in global photosynthesis and carbon cycling, and come away with
surprising
results about evolutionary engineering and new ideas about the role
that a
poorly understood chemical element may play in the world's oceans.
For
several years, Scripps Oceanography's Brian Palenik and his
collaborators,
including scientists from France,
Belgium
and Germany,
have
been analyzing and annotating an organism called Ostreococcus.
At one
micron it is the smallest known phytoplankton and one of the smallest
of all
the eukaryotes, organisms with specialized internal cell structures
that
include plants and animals. A teaspoon of seawater taken off the
Scripps
Oceanography Pier typically contains more than 100,000 eukaryotic
phytoplankton, which are found throughout the world's oceans.
Phytoplankton are
responsible for nearly half of the planet's photosynthesis.
Advances in genomics have allowed scientists to begin digging deeply
into a
long-standing biological puzzle concerning the mechanisms behind the
divergent
genomes of related photosynthetic phytoplankton species. The
international
team's work, published in the online edition of Proceedings
of the National
Academy of Sciences, is the first comparison of the genetic
makeup of two
closely related eukaryotic phytoplankton and the mechanisms that make
them
biologically similar and distinct.
"Through our research we've been trying to understand Ostreococcus'
role in marine ecosystems," said Palenik, who indicated Ostreococcus
cells contain nearly five times the DNA of comparably sized organisms
such as
cyanobacteria. "Genomics has taught us that you can learn much more
when
you can do a comparison.. The first genome is exciting but the second
genome is
even more exciting because you can suddenly compare organisms and see
what each
is doing differently and what they are doing the same."
The
researchers' comparison of Ostreococcus lucimarinus
(recently
sequenced by the DOE's Joint Genome Institute) and Ostreococcus
tauri
yielded several surprising results, including the documentation of a
"new" chromosome differing between the species. Another chromosome
appeared
somewhat different between the species and the researchers believe it
may serve
as a gene transfer "trash can" where foreign DNA is integrated. Yet
another difference was the identification of a chromosome featuring the
same-albeit rearranged-genes in the two species. The researchers
hypothesize
that this chromosome may be related to sexual functions because the
rearrangements are enough to prevent sex between the species.
"These are pretty remarkable differences that we didn't expect," said
Palenik, a professor in the Marine Biology Research Division at
Scripps.
"We would expect the DNA to change slowly and see a small number of
differences between the two species as they slowly evolve... This is
the case
for much of the genome. From a future applied perspective, from our
comparison
we are learning the tricks nature has used to 'engineer' an extremely
small
eukaryotic cell. This may have future applications in bioengineering."
Another important finding described in the paper is the prominent role
that the
element selenium plays in Ostreococcus. Humans
require selenium in
small amounts and most people have roughly 25 selenium proteins. Tiny Ostreococcus
organisms were shown to have up to 21 selenium proteins, an enormous
number
relative to their small genome and microscopic size.
Palenik believes this may be because selenium enzymes are some 10- to
50-times
more efficient than similar enzymes that don't use selenium. Based on
their
size, such efficiency is important to help conserve resources such as
nitrogen.
"We may need to think more about how selenium helps drive the health of
the oceans," said Palenik. "It's a nutrient element that we don't
understand very well and now we have evidence of a group of organisms
that
clearly use it intensively. We may need to think about how this is
affecting
primary production in the oceans."
Future research by Palenik and his colleagues will involve a third Ostreococcus
organism, which will lead to further comparisons and evolutionary
evaluations.
"Genomic comparisons are exciting because they allow us not to just
document the diversity of the ocean but to start to understand the
processes
behind that diversity and see all of the changes in the evolution of
two
species," said Palenik.
Coauthors of the paper include Chris Dupont, Vera Tai, Sheila Podell
and Terry
Gaasterlandof Scripps; Jane Grimwood and Jeremy Schmutz of Stanford
University
School of Medicine; Andrea Aerts, Asaf Salamov, Nicholas Putnam, Kemin
Zhou,
Robert Otillar, Gregory Werner, Inna Dubchak, Daniel Rokhsar and Igor
V.
Grigoriev of the DOE's Joint Genome Institute; Pierre Rouze, Stephane
Rombauts,
Steven Robbens and Yves Van de Peer of Ghent University; Richard
Jorgensen,
Carolyn Napoli and Karla Gendler of the University of Arizona at
Tucson; Evelyne
Derelle, Gwenael Piganeau, Séverine Jancek and
Hervé Moreau of the Université
Pierre et Marie Curie Paris 6; Sabeeha Merchant of the University of
California, Los Angeles; Olivier Vallon of the Université
Paris 6; Andrea
Manuell of The Scripps Research Institute; Martin Lohr Johannes of
Gutenberg-Universität; Gregory Pazour of the University of
Massachusetts
Medical School; Marc Heijde, Kamel Jabbari and Chris Bowler of the
Centre
National de la Recherche Scientifique; Qinghu Ren and Ian Paulsen of
The
Institute for Genomic Research; and Chuck Delwiche of the University of
Maryland at College Park.
The research was supported by the DOE, the European network "Marine
Genomics Europe" and performed under the auspices of the DOE's Office
of
Science, Biological and Environmental Research Program, the University of California,
Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory, Lawrence Berkeley National
Laboratory,
Los Alamos National Laboratory and Stanford University.
##
Contact:
Mario
Aguilera or Cindy Clark
Scripps
Institution of Oceanography
858-534-3624
scrippsnews@ucsd.edu
This
text derived from:
http://scrippsnews.ucsd.edu/Releases/?releaseID=787
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