MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS

The Antarctic convergence together with the west-to-east circumpolar current provide a powerful barrier to the movement of marine life into, or out of the region. Despite this physical isolation, Antarctic coastal sea waters are extremely rich in biodiversity. Among unicellular eukaryotes, diatoms a...

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Main Authors: GRAZIANO DI GIUSEPPE, CLAUDIO ALIMENTI, ADRIANA VALLESI, ALESSANDRO VALBONESI, PIERANGELO LUPORINI
Other Authors: Elvira De Matthaeis, Andrea Di Giulio, Marzio Zapparoli, DI GIUSEPPE, Graziano, Alimenti, Claudio, Vallesi, Adriana, Valbonesi, Alessandro, Luporini, Pierangelo
Format: Conference Object
Language:English
Published: Università Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Scienze 2019
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11568/1017706
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spelling ftunivpisairis:oai:arpi.unipi.it:11568/1017706 2024-04-14T08:01:49+00:00 MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS GRAZIANO DI GIUSEPPE CLAUDIO ALIMENTI ADRIANA VALLESI ALESSANDRO VALBONESI PIERANGELO LUPORINI Elvira De Matthaeis, Andrea Di Giulio, Marzio Zapparoli DI GIUSEPPE, Graziano Alimenti, Claudio Vallesi, Adriana Valbonesi, Alessandro Luporini, Pierangelo 2019 STAMPA http://hdl.handle.net/11568/1017706 eng eng Università Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Scienze country:ITA place:Roma info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/9788883442445 ispartofbook:Riassunti delle comunicazioni e dei poster 80° Congresso Nazionale Unione Zoologica Italiana firstpage:78 lastpage:78 numberofpages:1 alleditors:Elvira De Matthaeis, Andrea Di Giulio, Marzio Zapparoli http://hdl.handle.net/11568/1017706 info:eu-repo/semantics/conferenceObject 2019 ftunivpisairis 2024-03-21T19:11:28Z The Antarctic convergence together with the west-to-east circumpolar current provide a powerful barrier to the movement of marine life into, or out of the region. Despite this physical isolation, Antarctic coastal sea waters are extremely rich in biodiversity. Among unicellular eukaryotes, diatoms and dinoflagellates are the dominant autotrophic forms that bloom into huge biomasses in the water column, while filter-feeding ciliates are a dominant heterotrophic group that links the benthic and pelagic food webs by eating bacteria decomposers on the seabed and being, in turn, a relevant food source for sub-adult stages of benthonic and planktonic animals. Through many years of sampling coastal sites of Terra Nova Bay (Ross Sea) for species of the most speciose ciliate, Euplotes, we established a numerous laboratory collection of strains representing five well-distinct morphospecies, E. euryhalinus, E. focardii, E. nobilii, E. petzi and E. rariseta, which manifest sex in the form of conjugation under the genetic control of high-multiple mating-type systems that, by greatly favoring outbreeding, generate an ample intraspecific genetic diversity instrumental to establish reliable inter-population phylogenetic links and phylogeographic patterns. By determining and comparing the small-subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU-rRNA) gene sequences of these strains with homologous gene sequences from strains of non-Antarctic congeneric populations, evidence was obtained that E. euryhalinus, E. focardii, E. nobilii, E. petzi and E. rariseta split into distinct clades of the Euplotes phylogenetic tree. This phylogenetic split implies that the evolutionary history of Euplotes entails multiple, independent events of colonization of the Antarctic waters and suggests, in a general perspective of microbial biogeography, that the ecological barriers to move into, or out of Antarctic waters are largely ineffective to disrupt a bipolar, cosmopolitan dispersal of eukaryotic microorganisms. Which reinforces the concept of “metapopulation” (i.e., a ... Conference Object Antarc* Antarctic Ross Sea ARPI - Archivio della Ricerca dell'Università di Pisa Antarctic Ross Sea Terra Nova Bay The Antarctic
institution Open Polar
collection ARPI - Archivio della Ricerca dell'Università di Pisa
op_collection_id ftunivpisairis
language English
description The Antarctic convergence together with the west-to-east circumpolar current provide a powerful barrier to the movement of marine life into, or out of the region. Despite this physical isolation, Antarctic coastal sea waters are extremely rich in biodiversity. Among unicellular eukaryotes, diatoms and dinoflagellates are the dominant autotrophic forms that bloom into huge biomasses in the water column, while filter-feeding ciliates are a dominant heterotrophic group that links the benthic and pelagic food webs by eating bacteria decomposers on the seabed and being, in turn, a relevant food source for sub-adult stages of benthonic and planktonic animals. Through many years of sampling coastal sites of Terra Nova Bay (Ross Sea) for species of the most speciose ciliate, Euplotes, we established a numerous laboratory collection of strains representing five well-distinct morphospecies, E. euryhalinus, E. focardii, E. nobilii, E. petzi and E. rariseta, which manifest sex in the form of conjugation under the genetic control of high-multiple mating-type systems that, by greatly favoring outbreeding, generate an ample intraspecific genetic diversity instrumental to establish reliable inter-population phylogenetic links and phylogeographic patterns. By determining and comparing the small-subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU-rRNA) gene sequences of these strains with homologous gene sequences from strains of non-Antarctic congeneric populations, evidence was obtained that E. euryhalinus, E. focardii, E. nobilii, E. petzi and E. rariseta split into distinct clades of the Euplotes phylogenetic tree. This phylogenetic split implies that the evolutionary history of Euplotes entails multiple, independent events of colonization of the Antarctic waters and suggests, in a general perspective of microbial biogeography, that the ecological barriers to move into, or out of Antarctic waters are largely ineffective to disrupt a bipolar, cosmopolitan dispersal of eukaryotic microorganisms. Which reinforces the concept of “metapopulation” (i.e., a ...
author2 Elvira De Matthaeis, Andrea Di Giulio, Marzio Zapparoli
DI GIUSEPPE, Graziano
Alimenti, Claudio
Vallesi, Adriana
Valbonesi, Alessandro
Luporini, Pierangelo
format Conference Object
author GRAZIANO DI GIUSEPPE
CLAUDIO ALIMENTI
ADRIANA VALLESI
ALESSANDRO VALBONESI
PIERANGELO LUPORINI
spellingShingle GRAZIANO DI GIUSEPPE
CLAUDIO ALIMENTI
ADRIANA VALLESI
ALESSANDRO VALBONESI
PIERANGELO LUPORINI
MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS
author_facet GRAZIANO DI GIUSEPPE
CLAUDIO ALIMENTI
ADRIANA VALLESI
ALESSANDRO VALBONESI
PIERANGELO LUPORINI
author_sort GRAZIANO DI GIUSEPPE
title MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS
title_short MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS
title_full MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS
title_fullStr MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS
title_full_unstemmed MULTIPLE COLONIZATION EVENTS OF ANTARCTIC WATERS FROM THE CILIATE EUPLOTES: EVIDENCE FROM PHYLOGENETIC ANALYSIS OF ANTARCTIC AND NON ANTARCTIC POPULATIONS
title_sort multiple colonization events of antarctic waters from the ciliate euplotes: evidence from phylogenetic analysis of antarctic and non antarctic populations
publisher Università Roma Tre, Dipartimento di Scienze
publishDate 2019
url http://hdl.handle.net/11568/1017706
geographic Antarctic
Ross Sea
Terra Nova Bay
The Antarctic
geographic_facet Antarctic
Ross Sea
Terra Nova Bay
The Antarctic
genre Antarc*
Antarctic
Ross Sea
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctic
Ross Sea
op_relation info:eu-repo/semantics/altIdentifier/isbn/9788883442445
ispartofbook:Riassunti delle comunicazioni e dei poster
80° Congresso Nazionale Unione Zoologica Italiana
firstpage:78
lastpage:78
numberofpages:1
alleditors:Elvira De Matthaeis, Andrea Di Giulio, Marzio Zapparoli
http://hdl.handle.net/11568/1017706
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