Euglenozoan kleptoplasty illuminates the early evolution of photoendosymbiosis

Author:

Karnkowska Anna123ORCID,Yubuki Naoji12,Maruyama Moe45ORCID,Yamaguchi Aika6ORCID,Kashiyama Yuichiro45ORCID,Suzaki Toshinobu7ORCID,Keeling Patrick J.1,Hampl Vladimír2,Leander Brian S.18ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Department of Botany, Beaty Biodiversity Research Centre and Museum, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada

2. Department of Parasitology, Faculty of Science, Charles University, BIOCEV, Prague 25250, Czech Republic

3. Institute of Evolutionary Biology, Biological and Chemical Research Centre, Faculty of Biology, University of Warsaw, 02-096, Warsaw, Poland

4. Department of Applied Chemistry and Food Science, Faculty of Environmental and Information Sciences, Fukui University of Technology, Fukui 910-8505, Japan

5. Department of Applied Science and Engineering, Graduate School of Engineering, Fukui University of Technology, Fukui 910-8505, Japan

6. Department of Biological Sciences, Faculty of Science, Hokkaido University, Sapporo 060-0808, Japan

7. Department of Biology, Graduate School of Science, Kobe University, Kobe 657-8501, Japan

8. Department of Zoology, Beaty Biodiversity Research Centre and Museum, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada

Abstract

Kleptoplasts (kP) are distinct among photosynthetic organelles in eukaryotes (i.e., plastids) because they are routinely sequestered from prey algal cells and function only temporarily in the new host cell. Therefore, the hosts of kleptoplasts benefit from photosynthesis without constitutive photoendosymbiosis. Here, we report that the euglenozoan Rapaza viridis has only kleptoplasts derived from a specific strain of green alga, Tetraselmis sp., but no canonical plastids like those found in its sister group, the Euglenophyceae. R. viridis showed a dynamic change in the accumulation of cytosolic polysaccharides in response to light–dark cycles, and 13 C isotopic labeling of ambient bicarbonate demonstrated that these polysaccharides originate in situ via photosynthesis; these data indicate that the kleptoplasts of R. viridis are functionally active. We also identified 276 sequences encoding putative plastid-targeting proteins and 35 sequences of presumed kleptoplast transporters in the transcriptome of R. viridis . These genes originated in a wide range of algae other than Tetraselmis sp., the source of the kleptoplasts, suggesting a long history of repeated horizontal gene transfer events from different algal prey cells. Many of the kleptoplast proteins, as well as the protein-targeting system, in R. viridis were shared with members of the Euglenophyceae, providing evidence that the early evolutionary stages in the green alga-derived secondary plastids of euglenophytes also involved kleptoplasty.

Funder

MEXT | Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

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

Tula Foundation | Hakai Institute

Gordon and Betty Moore Foundation

European Molecular Biology Organization

Ministry of Higher Education in Poland

Publisher

Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences

Subject

Multidisciplinary

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