Multiple parallel origins of parasitic Marine Alveolates

Author:

Holt Corey C.ORCID,Hehenberger ElisabethORCID,Tikhonenkov Denis V.,Jacko-Reynolds Victoria K. L.ORCID,Okamoto NorikoORCID,Cooney Elizabeth C.ORCID,Irwin Nicholas A. T.ORCID,Keeling Patrick J.ORCID

Abstract

AbstractMicrobial eukaryotes are important components of marine ecosystems, and the Marine Alveolates (MALVs) are consistently both abundant and diverse in global environmental sequencing surveys. MALVs are dinoflagellates that are thought to be parasites of other protists and animals, but the lack of data beyond ribosomal RNA gene sequences from all but a few described species means much of their biology and evolution remain unknown. Using single-cell transcriptomes from several MALVs and their free-living relatives, we show that MALVs evolved independently from two distinct, free-living ancestors and that their parasitism evolved in parallel. Phylogenomics shows one subgroup (MALV-II and -IV, or Syndiniales) is related to a novel lineage of free-living, eukaryovorous predators, the eleftherids, while the other (MALV-I, or Ichthyodinida) is related to the free-living predator Oxyrrhis and retains proteins targeted to a non-photosynthetic plastid. Reconstructing the evolution of photosynthesis, plastids, and parasitism in early-diverging dinoflagellates shows a number of parallels with the evolution of their apicomplexan sisters. In both groups, similar forms of parasitism evolved multiple times and photosynthesis was lost many times. By contrast, complete loss of the plastid organelle is infrequent and, when this does happen, leaves no residual genes.

Funder

Russian Foundation for Basic Research

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

Gouvernement du Canada | Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

General Physics and Astronomy,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology,General Chemistry,Multidisciplinary

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