| Literature DB >> 32619486 |
Zhenhua Zhang1, Changfeng Qu2, Kaijian Zhang3, Yingying He4, Xing Zhao3, Lingxiao Yang1, Zhou Zheng2, Xiaoya Ma1, Xixi Wang4, Wenyu Wang4, Kai Wang4, Dan Li4, Liping Zhang4, Xin Zhang4, Danyan Su1, Xin Chang1, Mengyan Zhou3, Dan Gao3, Wenkai Jiang3, Frederik Leliaert5, Debashish Bhattacharya6, Olivier De Clerck7, Bojian Zhong8, Jinlai Miao9.
Abstract
The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas sp. ICE-L thrives in polar sea ice, where it tolerates extreme low temperatures, high salinity, and broad seasonal fluctuations in light conditions. Despite the high interest in biotechnological uses of this species, little is known about the adaptations that allow it to thrive in this harsh and complex environment. Here, we assembled a high-quality genome sequence of ∼542 Mb and found that retrotransposon proliferation contributed to the relatively large genome size of ICE-L when compared to other chlorophytes. Genomic features that may support the extremophilic lifestyle of this sea ice alga include massively expanded gene families involved in unsaturated fatty acid biosynthesis, DNA repair, photoprotection, ionic homeostasis, osmotic homeostasis, and reactive oxygen species detoxification. The acquisition of multiple ice binding proteins through putative horizontal gene transfer likely contributed to the origin of the psychrophilic lifestyle in ICE-L. Additional innovations include the significant upregulation under abiotic stress of several expanded ICE-L gene families, likely reflecting adaptive changes among diverse metabolic processes. Our analyses of the genome, transcriptome, and functional assays advance general understanding of the Antarctic green algae and offer potential explanations for how green plants adapt to extreme environments.Entities:
Keywords: adaptive evolution; comparative genomics; de novo genome; extreme Antarctic environments; sea ice green algae
Year: 2020 PMID: 32619486 DOI: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.06.029
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Curr Biol ISSN: 0960-9822 Impact factor: 10.834