2015
DOI: 10.1093/gbe/evv173
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Why It Is Time to Look Beyond Algal Genes in Photosynthetic Slugs

Abstract: Eukaryotic organelles depend on nuclear genes to perpetuate their biochemical integrity. This is true for mitochondria in all eukaryotes and plastids in plants and algae. Then how do kleptoplasts, plastids that are sequestered by some sacoglossan sea slugs, survive in the animals’ digestive gland cells in the absence of the algal nucleus encoding the vast majority of organellar proteins? For almost two decades, lateral gene transfer (LGT) from algae to slugs appeared to offer a solution, but RNA-seq analysis, … Show more

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Cited by 27 publications
(21 citation statements)
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References 41 publications
(52 reference statements)
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“…Clearly, there is no algal genomic support (Pelletreau et al, 2011;Wägele et al, 2011;Bhattacharya et al, 2013), neither through remnants of an algae nucleus nor through a eukaryotic horizontal gene transfer (Rauch et al, 2015). It is still unknown whether the slugs are able to actively support the kleptoplasts to stay functional.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Clearly, there is no algal genomic support (Pelletreau et al, 2011;Wägele et al, 2011;Bhattacharya et al, 2013), neither through remnants of an algae nucleus nor through a eukaryotic horizontal gene transfer (Rauch et al, 2015). It is still unknown whether the slugs are able to actively support the kleptoplasts to stay functional.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The M41 domain is crucial for the functionality of FTSH, in which monomers are assembled into heterooligomers (Janska et al, 2013) and at least one monomer needs to have the M41 domain (Zhang et al, 2010). It is thus likely that, although cp encoded, FTSH is not functioning in kleptoplasts, because there is no evidence that algal, nuclear encoded counterparts containing a M41 domain are present in the slugs genome (Rauch et al, 2015). Hence, kleptoplasts would not be able to repair damaged D1.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Several ongoing plastid-acquisition types of endosymbiosis are observed in sacoglossan sea slugs such as Elysia chlorotica and E. timida [11,[35][36][37], and in the marine ciliate Mesodinium rubrum [38][39][40][41]. However, they are defective in their ability to maintain permanent endosymbiosis.…”
Section: Life Cycle Of Endosymbionts In P Bursaria Host Cell Analyzementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Eine Gruppe deutscher und niederländischer Wissenschaftler, zu denen auch Wägele gehört, räumt nun in einer Gemeinschaftspublikation mit der Gentransfertheorie auf [8]. Die geringe Zahl nachgewiesener Algentranskripte bei Pierce et al sowie deren zu den entsprechenden Genen der Herkunftsalge identische Sequenz sprächen für eine Probenverunreinigung durch Nahrungsreste, da nach horizontalem Gentransfer üblicherweise eine Anpassung an den Codongebrauch des Empfängers erfolgt.…”
Section: Zoologieunclassified
“…Laut Berechnungen der Forscher ist ein Anteil von 0,0001% an Algentranskripten 200.000fach zu niedrig, um Photosynthese zu ermöglichen, und liegt sogar noch unter dem Wert, der üblicherweise auf Verunreinigungen zurückzuführen ist. Auch Ergebnisse von DNA‐Hybridisierungsexperimenten zum Nachweis von Algen‐DNA im Schneckengenom [9] sind aufgrund fehlender Spezifitätskontrollen der Sonden nicht überzeugend, was die Forscher schließen lässt, dass die bisher publizierten Daten keine Hinweise auf eine Expression von Algengenen im Schneckengenom liefern [8].…”
Section: Zoologieunclassified