Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations

© 2015 The Author. Spliceosomal introns are a hallmark of eukaryotic genes that are hypothesized to play important roles in genome evolution but have poorly understood origins. Although most introns lack sequence homology to each other, new families of spliceosomal introns that are repeated hundreds...

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Published in:Molecular Biology and Evolution
Main Authors: Simmons, MP, Bachy, C, Sudek, S, Van Baren, MJ, Sudek, L, Ares, M, Worden, AZ
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: eScholarship, University of California 2015
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Online Access:http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/77k998gg
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spelling ftcdlib:qt77k998gg 2023-05-15T13:50:54+02:00 Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations Simmons, MP Bachy, C Sudek, S Van Baren, MJ Sudek, L Ares, M Worden, AZ 2219 - 2235 2015-01-01 application/pdf http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/77k998gg english eng eScholarship, University of California qt77k998gg http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/77k998gg public Simmons, MP; Bachy, C; Sudek, S; Van Baren, MJ; Sudek, L; Ares, M; et al.(2015). Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 32(9), 2219 - 2235. doi:10.1093/molbev/msv122. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/77k998gg article 2015 ftcdlib https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv122 2018-07-13T22:55:00Z © 2015 The Author. Spliceosomal introns are a hallmark of eukaryotic genes that are hypothesized to play important roles in genome evolution but have poorly understood origins. Although most introns lack sequence homology to each other, new families of spliceosomal introns that are repeated hundreds of times in individual genomes have recently been discovered in a few organisms. The prevalence and conservation of these introner elements (IEs) or introner-like elements in other taxa, as well as their evolutionary relationships to regular spliceosomal introns, are still unknown. Here, we systematically investigate introns in the widespread marine green alga Micromonas and report new families of IEs, numerous intron presence-absence polymorphisms, and potential intron insertion hot-spots. The new families enabled identification of conserved IE secondary structure features and establishment of a novel general model for repetitive intron proliferation across genomes. Despite shared secondary structure, the IE families from each Micromonas lineage bear no obvious sequence similarity to those in the other lineages, suggesting that their appearance is intimately linked with the process of speciation. Two of the new IE families come from an Arctic culture (Micromonas Clade E2) isolated from a polar region where abundance of this alga is increasing due to climate induced changes. The same two families were detected in metagenomic data from Antarctica-a system where Micromonas has never before been reported. Strikingly high identity between the Arctic isolate and Antarctic coding sequences that flank the IEs suggests connectivity between populations in the two polar systems that we postulate occurs through deep-sea currents. Recovery of Clade E2 sequences in North Atlantic Deep Waters beneath the Gulf Stream supports this hypothesis. Our research illuminates the dynamic relationships between an unusual class of repetitive introns, genome evolution, speciation, and global distribution of this sentinel marine alga. Article in Journal/Newspaper Antarc* Antarctic Antarctica Arctic Arctic North Atlantic University of California: eScholarship Antarctic Arctic Molecular Biology and Evolution 32 9 2219 2235
institution Open Polar
collection University of California: eScholarship
op_collection_id ftcdlib
language English
description © 2015 The Author. Spliceosomal introns are a hallmark of eukaryotic genes that are hypothesized to play important roles in genome evolution but have poorly understood origins. Although most introns lack sequence homology to each other, new families of spliceosomal introns that are repeated hundreds of times in individual genomes have recently been discovered in a few organisms. The prevalence and conservation of these introner elements (IEs) or introner-like elements in other taxa, as well as their evolutionary relationships to regular spliceosomal introns, are still unknown. Here, we systematically investigate introns in the widespread marine green alga Micromonas and report new families of IEs, numerous intron presence-absence polymorphisms, and potential intron insertion hot-spots. The new families enabled identification of conserved IE secondary structure features and establishment of a novel general model for repetitive intron proliferation across genomes. Despite shared secondary structure, the IE families from each Micromonas lineage bear no obvious sequence similarity to those in the other lineages, suggesting that their appearance is intimately linked with the process of speciation. Two of the new IE families come from an Arctic culture (Micromonas Clade E2) isolated from a polar region where abundance of this alga is increasing due to climate induced changes. The same two families were detected in metagenomic data from Antarctica-a system where Micromonas has never before been reported. Strikingly high identity between the Arctic isolate and Antarctic coding sequences that flank the IEs suggests connectivity between populations in the two polar systems that we postulate occurs through deep-sea currents. Recovery of Clade E2 sequences in North Atlantic Deep Waters beneath the Gulf Stream supports this hypothesis. Our research illuminates the dynamic relationships between an unusual class of repetitive introns, genome evolution, speciation, and global distribution of this sentinel marine alga.
format Article in Journal/Newspaper
author Simmons, MP
Bachy, C
Sudek, S
Van Baren, MJ
Sudek, L
Ares, M
Worden, AZ
spellingShingle Simmons, MP
Bachy, C
Sudek, S
Van Baren, MJ
Sudek, L
Ares, M
Worden, AZ
Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
author_facet Simmons, MP
Bachy, C
Sudek, S
Van Baren, MJ
Sudek, L
Ares, M
Worden, AZ
author_sort Simmons, MP
title Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
title_short Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
title_full Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
title_fullStr Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
title_full_unstemmed Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
title_sort intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations
publisher eScholarship, University of California
publishDate 2015
url http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/77k998gg
op_coverage 2219 - 2235
geographic Antarctic
Arctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Arctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
Arctic
North Atlantic
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Antarctica
Arctic
Arctic
North Atlantic
op_source Simmons, MP; Bachy, C; Sudek, S; Van Baren, MJ; Sudek, L; Ares, M; et al.(2015). Intron invasions trace algal speciation and reveal nearly identical arctic and antarctic micromonas populations. Molecular Biology and Evolution, 32(9), 2219 - 2235. doi:10.1093/molbev/msv122. UC Santa Cruz: Retrieved from: http://www.escholarship.org/uc/item/77k998gg
op_relation qt77k998gg
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op_rights public
op_doi https://doi.org/10.1093/molbev/msv122
container_title Molecular Biology and Evolution
container_volume 32
container_issue 9
container_start_page 2219
op_container_end_page 2235
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