Genome Divergence In Two Prochlorococcus Ecotypes Reflects Oceanic Niche Differentiation
Rocap G, Larimer FW, Lamerdin J, Malfatti S, Chain P, Ahlgren NA, Arellano A, Coleman M, Hauser L, Hess WR, Johnson ZI, Land M, Lindell D, Post AF, Regala W, Shah M, Shaw SL, Steglich C, Sullivan MB, Ting CS, Tolonen A, Webb EA, Zinser ER, Chisholm SW
Nature. 2003 Aug 28;424(6952):1042-7. Epub 2003 Aug 13.
Abstract:
The marine unicellular cyanobacterium
Prochlorococcus is the
smallest-known oxygen-evolving autotroph. It numerically dominates the
phytoplankton in the tropical and subtropical oceans, and is responsible
for a significant fraction of global photosynthesis. Here we compare the
genomes of two
Prochlorococcus strains that span the largest evolutionary
distance within the
Prochlorococcus lineage and that have different
minimum, maximum and optimal light intensities for growth. The
high-light-adapted ecotype has the smallest genome (1,657,990 base pairs,
1,716 genes) of any known oxygenic phototroph, whereas the genome of its
low-light-adapted counterpart is significantly larger, at 2,410,873 base
pairs (2,275 genes). The comparative architectures of these two strains
reveal dynamic genomes that are constantly changing in response to myriad
selection pressures. Although the two strains have 1,350 genes in common,
a significant number are not shared, and these have been differentially
retained from the common ancestor, or acquired through duplication or
lateral transfer. Some of these genes have obvious roles in determining
the relative fitness of the ecotypes in response to key environmental
variables, and hence in regulating their distribution and abundance in the
oceans.
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