| Literature DB >> 28066344 |
Matthew D Johnson1, David J Beaudoin1, Aitor Laza-Martinez2, Sonya T Dyhrman3, Elizabeth Fensin4, Senjie Lin5, Aaron Merculief6, Satoshi Nagai7, Mayza Pompeu8, Outi Setälä9, Diane K Stoecker10.
Abstract
Ciliates from the genus Mesodinium are globally distributed in marine and freshwater ecosystems and may possess either heterotrophic or mixotrophic nutritional modes. Members of the Mesodinium major/rubrum species complex photosynthesize by sequestering and maintaining organelles from cryptophyte prey, and under certain conditions form periodic or recurrent blooms (= red tides). Here, we present an analysis of the genetic diversity of Mesodinium and cryptophyte populations from 10 environmental samples (eight globally dispersed habitats including five Mesodinium blooms), using group-specific primers for Mesodinium partial 18S, ITS, and partial 28S rRNA genes as well as cryptophyte large subunit RuBisCO genes (rbcL). In addition, 22 new cryptophyte and four new M. rubrum cultures were used to extract DNA and sequence rbcL and 18S-ITS-28S genes, respectively, in order to provide a stronger phylogenetic context for our environmental sequences. Bloom samples were analyzed from coastal Brazil, Chile, two Northeastern locations in the United States, and the Pribilof Islands within the Bering Sea. Additionally, samples were also analyzed from the Baltic and Barents Seas and coastal California under non-bloom conditions. Most blooms were dominated by a single Mesodinium genotype, with coastal Brazil and Chile blooms composed of M. major and the Eastern USA blooms dominated by M. rubrum variant B. Sequences from all four blooms were dominated by Teleaulax amphioxeia-like cryptophytes. Non-bloom communities revealed more diverse assemblages of Mesodinium spp., including heterotrophic species and the mixotrophic Mesodinium chamaeleon. Similarly, cryptophyte diversity was also higher in non-bloom samples. Our results confirm that Mesodinium blooms may be caused by M. major, as well as multiple variants of M. rubrum, and further implicate T. amphioxeia as the key cryptophyte species linked to these phenomena in temperate and subtropical regions.Entities:
Keywords: Mesodinium; Teleaulax; acquired phototrophy; ciliate genetic diversity; ciliates; cryptophytes; mixotrophy; red tides
Year: 2016 PMID: 28066344 PMCID: PMC5168500 DOI: 10.3389/fmicb.2016.02017
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Front Microbiol ISSN: 1664-302X Impact factor: 5.640
Primers designed and used for amplifying the SSU, ITS, and LSU rRNA genes of Mesodinium spp. and rbcL gene fragments of cryptophytes in this study.
| Primer | Sequence | Gene: position (bp) |
|---|---|---|
| MESO245F | CGACTCGACGTCCCG | 18S: 246 |
| MESO580R | CGTCCGTAGTCTGTACGTC | 18S: 585 |
| MESO1200F | ATTCCGGTAACGAACGAGAC | 18S: 1217 |
| MESO1440F | AACTAGGAATGTCTCGTAAGC | 18S: 1446 |
| MESO580R | GACGTACAGACTACGGACG | 18S: 603 |
| MESO865R | ACCTTCGTCCTTTGTCGCA | 18S: 1017 |
| MESO1480R | CTAAACACTCGATCGGTAGG | 18S: 1545 |
| MESO28S_R | AGACTTGGATGACTTTTATCACC | 28S: 298 |
| rbcL2F-800 | AGGAGGAAWAYATGTCTCAAT CCG | rbcL: 1 |
| Crypt_rbcLR2 | CAGTGAATACCACCTGAAGCTA | rbcL: 1185 |
Location and description of samples for analysis of Mesodinium and cryptophyte community diversity.
| Region | Description | Abbrev. | Date | Lat | Long | Sal PSU | Temp °C | Mesob cells ml-1 | Sample notesc |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| South Atlantic | Ilha Bela, BZ | BR | 2/15/14 | -23.80 | -45.22 | - | 24 | 37.5 | bloom |
| North Atlantic | Long Island Sound | LIS | 9/24/12 | 40.91 | -73.60 | 27.9 | 21.9 | 1003 | bloom; Oyster Bay |
| North Atlantic | Waves, NC | NC | 10/6/08 | 35.56 | -75.44 | 28.63 | 22.5 | 1750 | bloom |
| North Atlantic | Barents Sea; station M4 | Bar-M4 | 6/27/11 | 74.53 | 30.11 | 35.06 | 4.9 | 10 | 60m |
| Baltic Sea | Gulf of Finland; station LL3a | GF-LL3a | 7/8/12 | 60.07 | 26.34 | 5.26a | 17.4a | - | depth integrated |
| Baltic Sea | Gulf of Finland; station XVI | GF-XVI | 7/8/12 | 60.25 | 27.25 | 4.52a | 17.5a | - | depth integrated |
| Baltic Sea | Tvärminne Zoological Station | TV | 7/31/13 | 59.83 | 23.25 | 5.5 | 18.5 | - | Hanko, FI; conc.d |
| South Pacific | Chile Coast | CL | 11/23/10 | -19.97 | -70.72 | 34.8 | 19.5 | - | bloom |
| North Pacific | Bering Sea; St. George Is. | SGI | 9/15/12 | 56.57 | -169.68 | - | 6.6 | - | bloom |
| North Pacific | California Current | CC | 7/5/13 | 36.33 | -123.14 | 33.8 | 12.8 | 0.5 | 2m |
Origin and cellular dimensions of Mesodinium rubrum variant isolates.
| Variant | Strain | Origin/year | Length (μm) | Width (μm) | L/W | Volumea (μm3) | Cryptophyte prey | Type referenceh | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| A | NCMA 2563 | McMurdo Sound, AN 1996 | Mean | 23.1 (2.6) | 22.4 (2.7) | 1.1 (0.1) | 5707 (1826) | GCf | 1 |
| B | MR-MAL01 | Gomso Bay, KR | Mean | 21b | 13 | 1.6 | 1857c | TAg | 2 |
| B | MR-INO200702 | Inokushi Bay, JP | Mean | 25.8 (3.8) | 21.8 (3.8) | 1.2 (0.1) | 6719 (3008) | TA | 3 |
| F | AND-A0711 | Huelva, ES | Mean | 16.2 (1.7) | 13.0 (1.0) | 1.3 (0.1) | 1374 (308) | TA | 4 |
| F | Mr-DK2007 | Frederikssund, DK | Mean | 31d | 21 | 1.5 | 7154e | TA | 5 |
| G | CBJR05 | James River, US | Mean | 21.7 (3.0) | 16.0 (1.7) | 1.4 (0.2) | 2937 (914) | TA | Here |
Genetic p-distance matrix of a partial ‘18S–28S’ rDNA region for variants within the Mesodinium major/rubrum complex and other Mesodinium spp.
Details of genetic variation for the Mesodinium major/rubrum complex within the partial ‘18S–28S’ rDNA region for all available sequence data.