Horizontal gene transfer of the algal nuclear gene psbO to the photosynthetic sea slug Elysia chlorotica.

Mary E Rumpho, Jared M Worful, Jungho Lee, Krishna Kannan, Mary S Tyler, Debashish Bhattacharya, Ahmed Moustafa, James R Manhart

Department of Biochemistry, Microbiology, and Molecular Biology, University of Maine, Orono, ME 04469, USA.

Journal Article: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (impact factor: 9.43). 12/2008; 105(46):17867-71. DOI: 10.1073/pnas.0804968105

Abstract

The sea slug Elysia chlorotica acquires plastids by ingestion of its algal food source Vaucheria litorea. Organelles are sequestered in the mollusc's digestive epithelium, where they photosynthesize for months in the absence of algal nucleocytoplasm. This is perplexing because plastid metabolism depends on the nuclear genome for >90% of the needed proteins. Two possible explanations for the persistence of photosynthesis in the sea slug are (i) the ability of V. litorea plastids to retain genetic autonomy and/or (ii) more likely, the mollusc provides the essential plastid proteins. Under the latter scenario, genes supporting photosynthesis have been acquired by the animal via horizontal gene transfer and the encoded proteins are retargeted to the plastid. We sequenced the plastid genome and confirmed that it lacks the full complement of genes required for photosynthesis. In support of the second scenario, we demonstrated that a nuclear gene of oxygenic photosynthesis, psbO, is expressed in the sea slug and has integrated into the germline. The source of psbO in the sea slug is V. litorea because this sequence is identical from the predator and prey genomes. Evidence that the transferred gene has integrated into sea slug nuclear DNA comes from the finding of a highly diverged psbO 3' flanking sequence in the algal and mollusc nuclear homologues and gene absence from the mitochondrial genome of E. chlorotica. We demonstrate that foreign organelle retention generates metabolic novelty ("green animals") and is explained by anastomosis of distinct branches of the tree of life driven by predation and horizontal gene transfer.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

algal nucleocytoplasm
 
diverged psbO 3' flanking sequence
 
encoded proteins
 
essential plastid proteins
 
foreign organelle retention
 
gene absence
 
genetic autonomy
 
horizontal gene transfer
 
litorea plastids
 
mitochondrial genome
 
mollusc nuclear homologues
 
mollusc's digestive epithelium
 
needed proteins
 
nuclear gene
 
nuclear genome
 
plastid genome
 
possible explanations
 
sea slug Elysia chlorotica
 
sea slug nuclear DNA
 
transferred gene