Biology
Molecular Evolution of Nitrogen Assimilatory Enzymes in Marine Prasinophytes
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Nitrogen assimilation is a highly regulated process requiring metabolic coordination of enzymes and pathways in the cytosol, chloroplast, and mitochondria. Previous studies of prasinophyte genomes revealed that genes encoding nitrate and ammonium transporters have a complex evolutionary history involving both vertical and horizontal transmission. Here we examine the evolutionary history of well-conserved nitrogen-assimilating enzymes to determine if a similar complex history is observed. Phylogenetic analyses suggest that genes encoding glutamine synthetase (GS) III in the prasinophytes evolved by horizontal gene transfer from a member of the heterokonts. In contrast, genes encoding GSIIE, a canonical vascular plant and green algal enzyme, were found in the Micromonas genomes but have been lost from Ostreococcus. Phylogenetic analyses placed the Micromonas GSIIs in a larger chlorophyte/vascular plant clade; a similar topology was observed for ferredoxin-dependent nitrite reductase (Fd-NiR), indicating the genes encoding GSII and Fd-NiR in these prasinophytes evolved via vertical transmission. Our results show that genes encoding the nitrogen-assimilating enzymes in Micromonas and Ostreococcus have been differentially lost and as well as recruited from different evolutionary lineages, suggesting that the regulation of nitrogen assimilation in prasinophytes will differ from other green algae.
Publication Title
Journal of Molecular Evolution
Publication Date
2015
Volume
80
Issue
1
First Page
65
Last Page
80
ISSN
0022-2844
DOI
10.1007/s00239-014-9659-3
Keywords
Eukaryotic HGT, Glutamine synthetase, Micromonas, Nitrate reductase, Nitrite reductase, Nitrogen assimilation, Ostreococcus
Repository Citation
Ghoshroy, Sohini and Robertson, Deborah L., "Molecular Evolution of Nitrogen Assimilatory Enzymes in Marine Prasinophytes" (2015). Biology. 31.
https://commons.clarku.edu/faculty_biology/31