نتایج جستجو برای: secondary plastids

تعداد نتایج: 306522  

2014
Jörn Petersen Ann-Kathrin Ludewig Victoria Michael Boyke Bunk Michael Jarek Denis Baurain Henner Brinkmann

The discovery of Chromera velia, a free-living photosynthetic relative of apicomplexan pathogens, has provided an unexpected opportunity to study the algal ancestry of malaria parasites. In this work, we compared the molecular footprints of a eukaryote-to-eukaryote endosymbiosis in C. velia to their equivalents in peridinin-containing dinoflagellates (PCD) to reevaluate recent claims in favor o...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2006
Paul R Gilson Vanessa Su Claudio H Slamovits Michael E Reith Patrick J Keeling Geoffrey I McFadden

The introduction of plastids into different heterotrophic protists created lineages of algae that diversified explosively, proliferated in marine and freshwater environments, and radically altered the biosphere. The origins of these secondary plastids are usually inferred from the presence of additional plastid membranes. However, two examples provide unique snapshots of secondary-endosymbiosis...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2009
Michelle Ast Ansgar Gruber Stephan Schmitz-Esser Horst Ekkehard Neuhaus Peter G Kroth Matthias Horn Ilka Haferkamp

Diatoms are ecologically important algae that acquired their plastids by secondary endosymbiosis, resulting in a more complex cell structure and an altered distribution of metabolic pathways when compared with organisms with primary plastids. Diatom plastids are surrounded by 4 membranes; the outermost membrane is continuous with the endoplasmic reticulum. Genome analyses suggest that nucleotid...

Journal: :Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 2013
Madeleine Peschke Daniel Moog Andreas Klingl Uwe G Maier Franziska Hempel

Diatoms are microalgae that possess so-called "complex plastids," which evolved by secondary endosymbiosis and are surrounded by four membranes. Thus, in contrast to primary plastids, which are surrounded by only two membranes, nucleus-encoded proteins of complex plastids face additional barriers, i.e., during evolution, mechanisms had to evolve to transport preproteins across all four membrane...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2003
James T Harper Patrick J Keeling

Plastids (the photosynthetic organelles of plants and algae) originated through endosymbiosis between a cyanobacterium and a eukaryote and subsequently spread to other eukaryotes by secondary endosymbioses between two eukaryotes. Mounting evidence favors a single origin for plastids of apicomplexans, cryptophytes, dinoflagellates, haptophytes, and heterokonts (together with their nonphotosynthe...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2010
Guiling Sun Zefeng Yang Arjun Ishwar Jinling Huang

The spread of photosynthesis is one of the most important but controversial topics in eukaryotic evolution. Because of massive gene transfer from plastids to the nucleus and because of the possibility that plastids have been lost in evolution, algal genes in aplastidic organisms often are interpreted as footprints of photosynthetic ancestors. These putative plastid losses, in turn, have been ci...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2008
Claudio H Slamovits Patrick J Keeling

Reconstructing the history of plastid acquisition and loss in the alveolate protists is a difficult problem because our knowledge of the distribution of plastids in extant lineages is incomplete due to the possible presence of cryptic, nonphotosynthetic plastids in several lineages. The discovery of the apicoplast in apicomplexan parasites has drawn attention to this problem and, more specifica...

Journal: :Molecular biology and evolution 2007
Maik S Sommer Sven B Gould Petra Lehmann Ansgar Gruber Jude M Przyborski Uwe-G Maier

Phototrophic chromalveolates possess plastids surrounded by either 3 or 4 membranes, revealing their secondary endosymbiotic origin from an engulfed eukaryotic alga. In cryptophytes, a member of the chromalveolates, the organelle is embedded within a designated region of the host's rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER). Its eukaryotic compartments other than the plastid were reduced to the mere rem...

Journal: :Eukaryotic cell 2008
Anna Fong John M Archibald

Plastid genes encoding light-independent protochlorophyllide oxidoreductase (LIPOR) subunits were isolated from cryptophyte algae, the first example of such genes in plastids of secondary endosymbiotic origin. The presence of functional and nonfunctional copies of LIPOR genes in cryptophytes suggests that light-independent chlorophyll biosynthesis is a nonessential pathway in these organisms.

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