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The Complete Mitochondrial DNA Sequences of Nephroselmis olivacea and Pedinomonas minor : Two Radically Different Evolutionary Patterns within Green AlgaeMonique Turmela, Claude Lemieuxa, Gertraud Burgerb, B. Franz Langb, Christian Otisa, Isabelle Planteb, and Michael W. Grayca Program in Evolutionary Biology, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, and Département de Biochimie, Université Laval, Québec, Québec G1K 7P4, Canada b Program in Evolutionary Biology, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, and Département de Biochimie, Université de Montréal, Montréal, Québec H3C 3J7, Canada c Program in Evolutionary Biology, Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, and Department of Biochemistry and Molecular Biology, Dalhousie University, Halifax, Nova Scotia B3H 4H7, Canada Correspondence to: Monique Turmel, mturmel{at}bcm.ulaval.ca (E-mail), 418-656-7176 (fax)
Green plants appear to comprise two sister lineages, Chlorophyta (classes Chlorophyceae, Ulvophyceae, Trebouxiophyceae, and Prasinophyceae) and Streptophyta (Charophyceae and Embryophyta, or land plants). To gain insight into the nature of the ancestral green plant mitochondrial genome, we have sequenced the mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNAs) of Nephroselmis olivacea and Pedinomonas minor. These two green algae are presumptive members of the Prasinophyceae. This class is thought to include descendants of the earliest diverging green algae. We find that Nephroselmis and Pedinomonas mtDNAs differ markedly in size, gene content, and gene organization. Of the green algal mtDNAs sequenced so far, that of Nephroselmis (45,223 bp) is the most ancestral (minimally diverged) and occupies the phylogenetically most basal position within the Chlorophyta. Its repertoire of 69 genes closely resembles that in the mtDNA of Prototheca wickerhamii, a later diverging trebouxiophycean green alga. Three of the Nephroselmis genes (nad10, rpl14, and rnpB) have not been identified in previously sequenced mtDNAs of green algae and land plants. In contrast, the 25,137-bp Pedinomonas mtDNA contains only 22 genes and retains few recognizably ancestral features. In several respects, including gene content and rate of sequence divergence, Pedinomonas mtDNA resembles the reduced mtDNAs of chlamydomonad algae, with which it is robustly affiliated in phylogenetic analyses. Our results confirm the existence of two radically different patterns of mitochondrial genome evolution within the green algae.
Of the three main kingdoms of evolutionarily advanced eukaryotes (animals, fungi, and land plants), plants have the most clearly defined antecedents. Combined molecular, biochemical, and ultrastructural data demonstrate that the unicellular progenitors of land plants lie within the green algae, which together with land plants form a monophyletic lineage that is characterized by the presence of chloroplasts surrounded by two membranes and containing stacked thylakoids and chlorophylls a and b (
Phycologists generally recognize five classes of green algae: the Charophyceae, which include the closest relatives of land plants; the Chlorophyceae; the Trebouxiophyceae; the Ulvophyceae; and a nonmonophyletic group known as the Prasinophyceae (reviewed in
Complete mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) sequences have been determined for four green algae and two land plants, and these data indicate that the mitochondrial genome has followed distinctly different evolutionary pathways in the two major lineages of green plants. In the streptophyte lineage, complete sequence is available for the mtDNA of two representatives of land plants, the liverwort Marchantia polymorpha (
Indeed, only a few additional genes have been identified in the Marchantia and Arabidopsis mitochondrial genomes compared with that of Prototheca (
In contrast, the mtDNAs of green algae from the chlorophyte lineage appear to be constrained to remain tightly packed with genes. Remarkably, a subgroup of these green algae bears mtDNAs that are severely reduced both in size and gene content and feature an unusual rRNA gene organization. The C. reinhardtii (15,758 bp) and C. eugametos (22,897 bp) mitochondrial genomes are twofold smaller than their Prototheca homolog and contain only 12 genes, that is, 49 genes fewer than in the latter green alga. Considering that C. reinhardtii and C. eugametos represent the two main clades that were identified in the large and nonmonophyletic genus Chlamydomonas (
In both C. reinhardtii and C. eugametos, the mitochondrial large subunit (LSU) and SSU rRNA genes are fragmented into subgenic modules that are scrambled and interspersed with other mitochondrial genes instead of being continuous, as in almost all other mtDNAs examined to date. This exceptional gene organization has also been observed in the chlamydomonad alga Chlorogonium elongatum ( Thus, available data indicate the existence of distinct patterns of mitochondrial genome evolution not only between Streptophyta and Chlorophyta but within Chlorophyta as well, raising a number of questions. What accounts for the radical differences observed to date in the evolutionary pathways followed by the mitochondrial genome within the chlorophyte algae? How do we explain the markedly distinct patterns of mtDNA organization between the chlorophyte and streptophyte lineages? How widespread are these diverse patterns, and do other types exist? What evolutionary mechanisms underlie these differences? What did the mitochondrial genome of the common ancestor of all green algae and land plants look like? Answers to these questions can only be obtained by examining the mitochondrial genome in a broader range of green algae. In this study, we sought to gain insight into the nature of the ancestral green algal mitochondrial genome by undertaking the complete sequencing of the mtDNAs of two presumed prasinophytes, Nephroselmis olivacea and Pedinomonas minor. Our results demonstrate that these two mitochondrial genomes differ radically in gene content and organization, falling into one of the two chlorophyte patterns previously described. These data, together with an exhaustive phylogenetic analysis of mitochondrial protein-coding sequences, further illuminate the evolution of green algal mtDNA and the interrelationships of the relevant green algae themselves.
The Mitochondrial Genome of Nephroselmis
Despite their similarity in gene content, the mtDNAs of Nephroselmis and Prototheca differ markedly in gene arrangement and in the distribution of genes between the two strands. In Prototheca mtDNA, all contiguous genes in almost half of the genome are encoded by the same strand, whereas those in the rest of the genome are present on the complementary strand. This distribution suggests that there could be as few as two transcription units in Prototheca mtDNA. In contrast, at least 14 potential transcriptional units are predicted from the distribution of genes in the Nephroselmis mitochondrial genome, assuming completely asymmetric transcription of the genome.
Like its homologs in Prototheca, the Nephroselmis rns and rnl genes have a conventional structure. The products of these two genes, the SSU and LSU rRNAs, respectively, as well as the 5S RNA and the RNase P RNA, fold into potential secondary structures that to a high degree resemble those of their counterparts in eubacteria. Figure 2 shows the secondary structure model of the Nephroselmis RNase P RNA (352 nucleotides long). This model displays most of the conserved primary and secondary structural motifs of the consensus eubacterial RNase P RNA model (
The 26 identified tRNA genes encode products with conventional cloverleaf secondary structures, and this complement is sufficient to decode the entire set of codons found in Nephroselmis mtDNA. This is similar to the situation in Prototheca mitochondria but differs from what is observed in Chlamydomonas spp mtDNAs. Although the mitochondrial tRNA complement of Prototheca also comprises 26 species, two tRNAs (tRNAGly [gcc] and tRNATrp [ugu]) are not encoded by Nephroselmis mtDNA (Table 2). The two Nephroselmis mitochondrial tRNAs having no equivalents in Prototheca are tRNAArg (ucg) and tRNATrp (ggu).
Each of the four introns in Nephroselmis mtDNA belongs to the group I family and contains an ORF potentially encoding a specific DNA endonuclease bearing the LAGLIDADG motif. Three introns reside within the rnl gene at sites corresponding to residues 1931/1932, 2500/2501, and 2593/2594 of the Escherichia coli LSU rRNA sequence. Interestingly, ORF-containing introns similar to the Nephroselmis site 1931 and site 2593 introns are located at exactly the same positions in the mitochondrial rnl gene of the nonphotosynthetic protist Acanthamoeba castellanii (
The fourth Nephroselmis mitochondrial intron is inserted in the cob gene at the same position as the unique intron found in the Chlamydomonas smithii cob gene (
The Mitochondrial Genome of Pedinomonas
As shown in Table 1 and Table 2, Pedinomonas mtDNA shares with C. reinhardtii and C. eugametos mtDNAs five nad genes, cox1, cob, rns, rnl, and two tRNA genes. In addition, the Pedinomonas mitochondrial genome encodes two atp genes (atp6 and atp8), two extra nad genes (nad3 and nad4L), and six more tRNA genes. Pedinomonas mtDNA thus resembles its Chlamydomonas spp homologs in harboring (1) a reduced set of genes encoding proteins involved in respiration, electron transport, and oxidative phosphorylation; (2) the absence of any 5S rRNA and ribosomal protein genes; (3) a limited number of tRNA genes; and (4) a fragmented and rearranged rnl gene (Table 1 and Table 2). Particularly noteworthy is the absence of cox2 and cox3 from the two Chlamydomonas spp and Pedinomonas mtDNAs. Both cox2 and cox3 are encoded in all but three of 23 other completely sequenced protist mtDNAs, whereas, like their Pedinomonas and Chlamydomonas spp counterparts, most of these mtDNAs lack the 5S rRNA gene and a number of ribosomal protein genes (
The eight tRNAs encoded by Pedinomonas mtDNA have conventional structures and are presumably supplemented by imported, nuclear DNA-encoded tRNAs to permit translation of all codons in protein-coding genes. Codon usage in Pedinomonas mtDNA is biased and deviates slightly from the standard genetic code in that UGA is decoded as Trp. This deviation is consistent with the presence of a tRNATrp having a UCA anticodon, which could recognize both UGG and UGA codons. Except in five species of chlorophycean green algae, in which TAG in mitochondrial protein genes may code for either Ala or Leu (
The Pedinomonas LSU rRNA is fragmented at a single site, situated within a variable region separating domains V and VI in the secondary structure. Breaks have not been found previously at this position in other organellar LSU rRNAs, but they have been observed at approximately the same place in trypanosomatid and Euglena gracilis nucleocytoplasmic LSU rRNAs (
A single intron (group II and lacking an ORF) is inserted within the Pedinomonas rnl_a gene at precisely the same site (between positions corresponding to 1787 and 1788 in the E. coli secondary structure) as a group II intron in the mitochondrial rnl gene of the brown alga Pylaiella littoralis ( Pedinomonas mtDNA contains a 9-kb-long region of repeated sequences, located between nad1 and nad6. The primary repeat elements range in size from 6 to 389 bp and comprise 13 distinct families (ele-01 to ele-13) based on sequence relatedness. Although most members within an element family are identical, a few are distinguished by sequence differences of up to 25%. The repeat elements either occur as simple duplications or are integrated into an elaborate superstructure in which primary elements from different families form second-order, and those again third-order, repeat units. An example of a simple duplication is ele-13 (311 bp), which includes a trnY gene and the 3'-terminal portion of nad1 (Figure 3). One copy of ele-13 thus slightly overlaps nad1, whereas a second copy sharing 87% sequence identity with the first is found (in the same orientation) 7139 bp downstream of nad1. More complex arrangements are present in the region located between the two copies of ele-13 and in a 1926-bp region between the second copy of ele-13 and nad6. Nine distinct second-order elements can be distinguished in these regions; they are characterized by combinations of from three to five primary repeat members that are always arranged in tandem orientation and that contain in their central portion the 6-bp recognition sequence of HpaI. Three of these second-order elements form a third-order unit in which two of the constituent elements are present in reverse orientation. It is unclear what, if any, function these repeat structures have in Pedinomonas mtDNA.
Phylogenetic Analyses of Nephroselmis and Pedinomonas Mitochondrial Protein Sequences
Figure 4A shows a mitochondrial tree featuring two red algae, Porphyra purpurea and Chondrus crispus, and two fungi, Podospora anserina and Allomyces macrogynus, in addition to the green algae and land plants whose complete mtDNA sequences were available at the time of the analysis. The topology depicted is that of the best tree; it is supported with a frequency of 0.79 in RELL bootstrap samples. It can be seen that Nephroselmis clusters robustly with the trebouxiophyte Prototheca, whereas Marchantia and Arabidopsis represent the sister group of this clade. The two red algae form an independent cluster, the sister group of the green algal/land plant clade. Pedinomonas, C. reinhardtii, and C. eugametos are found entirely outside of the green algal/land plant/red algal clade, forming a strongly supported cluster whose remarkably long branches undoubtedly reflect the highly accelerated rate of sequence divergence of Pedinomonas and Chlamydomonas spp mtDNAs relative to other protist and land plant mtDNAs. This accelerated rate of evolution is clearly evident in protein sequence alignments: whereas the Pedinomonas and Chlamydomonas spp sequences differ by multiple substitutions at several sites, the other sequences differ mostly by single substitutions (data not shown). Removal of either the two Chlamydomonas spp or Pedinomonas from the data set did not alter the position of Pedinomonas or that of Chlamydomonas spp relative to other green algae and land plants (data not shown), and neither did the addition of mitochondrial protein sequences from the prasinophyte Tetraselmis subcordiformis (Figure 4B), ~40% of whose 42.8-kb mtDNA has been sequenced (
Figure 4C and Figure 4D show chloroplast phylogenies that were inferred from rnl gene sequences by using a maximum likelihood approach. In contrast to the mitochondrial trees presented above, these chloroplast phylogenies reveal that Pedinomonas and Chlamydomonas spp cluster with Prototheca, Tetraselmis, and Nephroselmis. This clade of chlorophytes, the sister group of the land plant clade (formed by Marchantia and tobacco), is strongly supported, with bootstrap values of 94 and 95%.
Two Distinct Patterns of Mitochondrial Genome Evolution within the Chlorophyte Algae
Nephroselmis mtDNA Represents the Most Ancestral Form of the Mitochondrial Genome within the Green Algae
Three of the 69 genes encoded by Nephroselmis mtDNA (nad10, rpl14, and rnpB) had not been identified in the mitochondrial genomes of the other green algae and land plants examined to date. The finding of nad10 and rnpB in Nephroselmis mtDNA was particularly unexpected, because these genes are not widely distributed among mitochondrial genomes. The nad10 gene is known to be encoded by the mtDNAs of the cryptomonad alga Rhodomonas salina, the ciliates Tetrahymena pyriformis and Paramecium aurelia, and the heterotrophic flagellate Reclinomonas (
Although the gene content of Nephroselmis mtDNA barely exceeds that of Prototheca mtDNA, its organizational pattern is clearly more ancestral. Nephroselmis mtDNA shares five gene clusters with Reclinomonas mtDNA, a minimally derived mitochondrial genome encoding 97 genes and representing the most ancestral form of mtDNA among protists (
Ribosomal protein genes in Nephroselmis mtDNA are arrayed in a fashion mirroring the order of the homologous genes in the contiguous str, S10, spc, and Like the ribosomal protein gene cluster, the Nephroselmis mitochondrial gene clusters nad5-nad4-nad2, nad10-nad9, and cox2-cox3 have equivalents in a number of mtDNAs as well as in bacterial genomes; thus, they undoubtedly represent vestiges of prokaryotic operon organization. On the other hand, the trnR(ucu)-rnpB/trnG(ucc) and rns-rnl clusters have been described so far only in Nephroselmis and Reclinomonas mtDNAs; consequently, they may well represent derived characters of the protomitochondrial genome that have been conserved in these two mtDNAs but lost in most mtDNAs analyzed to date. Although the rns-rnl cluster could be fortuitous, this is unlikely in the case of the three-gene trnR(ucu)-rnpB/trnG(ucc) cluster. We therefore believe that the conservation of the genes flanking the eubacteria-like rnpB gene in both Nephroselmis and Reclinomonas mtDNAs points to a shared evolutionary history of the green algal and jakobid mitochondrial genomes.
Our conclusion that Nephroselmis mtDNA more closely resembles the protomitochondrial genome than any of the other green algal mtDNAs investigated to date still holds when the partial sequence information available for the 42.8-kb mtDNA of the prasinophyte T. subcordiformis (
Significance of the Similar Gene Contents of Pedinomonas and Chlamydomonas spp mtDNAs
The Phylogenetic Position of Pedinomonas: Implications for the Evolutionary History of the Mitochondrial Genome and for Taxonomic Classification
Nevertheless, Pedinomonas and chlamydomonads cannot be regarded as very close relatives because they show substantial differences at the ultrastructural level (
Our finding that Pedinomonas is not allied with Nephroselmis but rather belongs to more derived lineages related to chlamydomonads supports the views of
Mitochondrial Genome Evolution in Green Algae and Land Plants: Current Perspective In sharp contrast to the organizational patterns seen in the chlorophyte lineage, the evolutionary pattern of land plant mitochondrial genomes is characterized by a marked expansion in genome size without a corresponding increase in genetic complexity. This expanded pattern has been accompanied by an increase in the size of intergenic spacers and in the number of introns and intron ORFs. Within the angiosperms, there has been a progressive loss of ancestral character, with the breakup of eubacteria-like gene clusters, fragmentation of genes (concomitant with the appearance of trans-splicing), transfer of genes (mostly ribosomal protein genes) to the nucleus, incorporation of foreign (e.g., chloroplast) DNA, and loss of tRNA genes. Analyses of mtDNAs from various charophytes may well provide insight into when and how the ancestral pattern of organization shifted to an expanded pattern.
Strains and Culture Conditions
Sequencing of Nephroselmis mtDNA
In the course of screening the library, an mtDNA clone carrying the rnl gene was identified by hybridization. This clone served as the starting point for a genome walk undertaken to assemble a collection of clones encompassing the Nephroselmis mtDNA, using as probes polymerase chain reactionamplified fragments complementary to the termini of selected inserts or long polymerase chain reactionamplified fragments covering gaps between contigs. Several clones from each round of hybridization were selected for DNA isolation. Bacteriophage particles were prepared using the standard procedure described by All nucleotide sequences were determined with the PRISM dye terminator cycle sequencing kit (1 µg of phage DNA per reaction; Applied Biosystems, Foster City, CA) on a DNA sequencer (model 373; Applied Biosystems). Both ends of each insert were sequenced using the T7 and SP6 primers, whereas internal regions of inserts were sequenced by the primer walking method using specific 22-mer oligonucleotides. Genomic regions not represented in the clones analyzed were sequenced from polymerase chain reactionamplified fragments. Sequences were assembled using the AUTOASSEMBLER program (version 1.4.0; Applied Biosystems) and were analyzed using the Genetics Computer Group (Madison, WI) software (version 9.1) package.
Sequencing of Pedinomonas mtDNA
Phylogenetic Analysis
The nucleotide sequences of chloroplast rnl genes were manually aligned on the basis of secondary structure models by using the sequence editor of the Genetic Development Environment program (
Cloning, sequencing, and analysis of Nephroselmis mtDNA were performed in the laboratories of M.T. and C.L. at Laval University, with the support of grants from the Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (No. GP0003293 to M.T. and No. GP0002830 to C.L.). Pedinomonas mtDNA was cloned and sequenced under the auspices of the Organelle Genome Mega-sequencing Program at the University of Montreal, with the aid of Special Project grant No. SP-34 from the Medical Research Council of Canada and grant No. G0-12323 from the Canadian Genome Analysis and Technology Program. We thank Stéphane Lévesque for preparing DNA templates of Received January 13, 1999; accepted May 18, 1999.
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