In cryptomonads, unicellular phototrophic flagellates, the plastid(s) is (are) located in a special narrow compartment which is bordered by two membranes; it harbours neither mitochondria nor Golgi dictyosomes but comprises eukaryotic ribosomes and starch grains together with a small organelle called the nucleomorph. The nucleomorph contains DNA and is surrounded by a double membrane with pores. It is thought to be the vestigial nucleus of a phototrophic eukaryotic endosymbiont. Cryptomonads are therefore supposed to represent an intermediate state in the evolution of complex plastids from endosymbionts. We have succeeded in isolating pure nucleomorph fractions, and can thus provide, using pulsed field gel electrophoresis, polymerase chain reaction and sequence analysis, definitive proof for the eukaryotic nature of the symbiont and its phylogenetic origin.
Cryptomonads are unicellular algae with chloroplasts surrounded by four membranes. Between the inner and the outer pairs of membranes is a narrow plasmatic compartment which contains a nucleus-like organelle called the nucleomorph. Using pulsed field gel electrophoresis it is shown that the nucleomorph of the cryptomonad Pyrenomonas salina contains three linear chromosomes of 195 kb, 225 kb and 240 kb all of which encode rRNAs. Thus, this vestigial nucleus has a haploid genome size of 660 kb, harboring the smallest eukaryotic genome known so far. From the cell nucleus of P. salina at least 20 chromosomes ranging from 230 kb to 3.000 kb were fractionated. Here, the rDNA was detected on a single chromosome of about 2.500 kb.
The cryptomonad Pyrenomonas salina presumably has arisen from a symbiotic event involving a flagellated phagotrophic host cell and a photosynthetic eukaryote as the symbiont. Correspondingly, in this unicellular alga there are four different genomes, e.g., the nuclear and the mitochondrial genomes of the host cell as well as the plastid genome and the genome contained in the vestigial nucleus of the endocytobiont (nucleomorph). To analyze the origin of one of the symbiotic partners the small subunit rRNA gene sequence of the host cell nucleus was determined, and a secondary structure model has been constructed. This sequence is compared to those of 40 other eukaryotes. A phylogenetic tree constructed using the neighborliness method revealed a close relationship between the host cell of P. salina and the chlorophytes, whereas the rhodophytes diverge more deeply in the tree.
The dinoflagellates Glenodinium foliaceum Stein and Peridinium balticum (Levander) Lemmermann harbor a chrysophytic endocytobiont which is bounded by only a single membrane. This unique membrane is of particular interest because it could correspond to an intermediate stage in the evolution of “complex” plastids found in many Plastids of this type are surrounded by three or membranes instead of the usual two. With freeze‐fracture techniques, we show that the single membrane in P. balticum has a pronounced polarity with respect to the distribution of intramembrane particles (IMPs) on the two corresponding fracture faces. The inner face exhibited more IMPs than the outer. We suggest that this stdedness identifies the separating membrane as the plasma membrane of the endocytobiont. A symbiontophoric vacuole with a separate membrane apparently is lacking. In the endocytobiosis of G. foliaccum, the single membrane separating host and endocylobiont exhibits a symmetrical particle partition. Nevertheless, from the size distribution of the IMPs it appears likely that this membrane, too, corresponds to the plasma membrane of the symbiont.
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