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Niche adaptation and genome expansion in the chlorophyll d-producing cyanobacterium Acaryochloris marina

Authors :
Soichirou Satoh
Mamoru Mimuro
Hideaki Miyashita
Jeffrey W. Touchman
Pushpa Ramakrishna
Heather L. Taylor
Yuichiro Shimada
Amber L. Conrad
Barbara M. Honchak
Min Chen
Zi T. Wang
Jicheng Hao
Lawrence E. Page
Surobhi Lahiri
W. Matthew Sattley
Robert E. Blankenship
Patricia C. Cheung
Tatsuya Tomo
Jason Raymond
Wesley D. Swingley
Tohru Tsuchiya
Liza C. Dejesa
Lauren E. Karbach
Ahmet Kurdoglu
Stephen D. Mastrian
Publication Year :
2008
Publisher :
National Academy of Sciences, 2008.

Abstract

Acaryochloris marina is a unique cyanobacterium that is able to produce chlorophyll d as its primary photosynthetic pigment and thus efficiently use far-red light for photosynthesis. Acaryochloris species have been isolated from marine environments in association with other oxygenic phototrophs, which may have driven the niche-filling introduction of chlorophyll d . To investigate these unique adaptations, we have sequenced the complete genome of A. marina . The DNA content of A. marina is composed of 8.3 million base pairs, which is among the largest bacterial genomes sequenced thus far. This large array of genomic data is distributed into nine single-copy plasmids that code for >25% of the putative ORFs. Heavy duplication of genes related to DNA repair and recombination (primarily recA ) and transposable elements could account for genetic mobility and genome expansion. We discuss points of interest for the biosynthesis of the unusual pigments chlorophyll d and α-carotene and genes responsible for previously studied phycobilin aggregates. Our analysis also reveals that A. marina carries a unique complement of genes for these phycobiliproteins in relation to those coding for antenna proteins related to those in Prochlorococcus species. The global replacement of major photosynthetic pigments appears to have incurred only minimal specializations in reaction center proteins to accommodate these alternate pigments. These features clearly show that the genus Acaryochloris is a fitting candidate for understanding genome expansion, gene acquisition, ecological adaptation, and photosystem modification in the cyanobacteria.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....bbd62f4fb0593d77651e2dcad204c541