The genome of Prasinoderma coloniale unveils the existence of a third phylum within green plants
Loading...
Date
Authors
Li, Linzhou
Wang, Sibo
Wang, Hongli
Sahu, Sunil Kumar
Marin, Birger
Li, Haoyuan
Xu, Yan
Liang, Hongping
Li, Zhen
Cheng, Shifeng
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nature Research
Abstract
Genome analysis of the pico-eukaryotic marine green alga Prasinoderma coloniale CCMP 1413 unveils the existence of a novel
phylum within green plants (Viridiplantae), the Prasinodermophyta, which diverged before the split of Chlorophyta and
Streptophyta. Structural features of the genome and gene family comparisons revealed an intermediate position of the P. coloniale
genome (25.3 Mb) between the extremely compact, small genomes of picoplanktonic Mamiellophyceae (Chlorophyta)
and the larger, more complex genomes of early-diverging streptophyte algae. Reconstruction of the minimal core genome
of Viridiplantae allowed identification of an ancestral toolkit of transcription factors and flagellar proteins. Adaptations of
P. coloniale to its deep-water, oligotrophic environment involved expansion of light-harvesting proteins, reduction of early
light-induced proteins, evolution of a distinct type of C4 photosynthesis and carbon-concentrating mechanism, synthesis of
the metal-complexing metabolite picolinic acid, and vitamin B1, B7 and B12 auxotrophy. The P. coloniale genome provides first
insights into the dawn of green plant evolution.
Description
Data availability: Whole-genome assemblies, annotation and raw data for P. coloniale in this study
are deposited at the CNGB Nucleotide Sequence Archive92 (CNSA: http://db.cngb.
org/cnsa, accession no. CNP0000924).
Keywords
Genome, Green plants, Evolution, Vitamin, Prasinoderma coloniale
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Li, L.Z., Wang, S.B., Wang, H.L. et al. 2020, 'The genome of Prasinoderma coloniale unveils the
existence of a third phylum within green plants', Nature Ecology and Evolution, vol. 4, pp. 1220-1231.