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Phylogenetic analysis of the light-harvesting system in Chromera velia
被引:27
|作者:
Pan, Hao
[1
]
Slapeta, Jan
[2
]
Carter, Dee
[3
]
Chen, Min
[1
]
机构:
[1] Univ Sydney, Fac Sci, Sch Biol Sci A08, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[2] Univ Sydney, Fac Vet Sci, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
[3] Univ Sydney, Sch Mol Biosci, Discipline Microbiol, Sydney, NSW 2006, Australia
基金:
澳大利亚研究理事会;
关键词:
Light-harvesting protein complexes (LHC);
Chromera velia (C. velia);
Membrane-spanning regions;
Chlorophyll-binding protein complexes;
BINDING PROTEINS;
ANTENNA PROTEINS;
CHL A/B;
EVOLUTION;
COMPLEX;
DINOFLAGELLATE;
APICOMPLEXAN;
POLYPEPTIDE;
HYPOTHESIS;
MORPHOLOGY;
D O I:
10.1007/s11120-011-9710-9
中图分类号:
Q94 [植物学];
学科分类号:
071001 ;
摘要:
Chromera velia is a newly discovered photosynthetic eukaryotic alga that has functional chloroplasts closely related to the apicoplast of apicomplexan parasites. Recently, the chloroplast in C. velia was shown to be derived from the red algal lineage. Light-harvesting protein complexes (LHC), which are a group of proteins involved in photon capture and energy transfer in photosynthesis, are important for photosynthesis efficiency, photo-adaptation/accumulation and photo-protection. Although these proteins are encoded by genes located in the nucleus, LHC peptides migrate and function in the chloroplast, hence the LHC may have a different evolutionary history compared to chloroplast evolution. Here, we compare the phylogenetic relationship of the C. velia LHCs to LHCs from other photosynthetic organisms. Twenty-three LHC homologues retrieved from C. velia EST sequences were aligned according to their conserved regions. The C. velia LHCs are positioned in four separate groups on trees constructed by neighbour-joining, maximum likelihood and Bayesian methods. A major group of seventeen LHCs from C. velia formed a separate cluster that was closest to dinoflagellate LHC, and to LHC and fucoxanthin chlorophyll-binding proteins from diatoms. One C. velia LHC sequence grouped with LI1818/LI818-like proteins, which were recently identified as environmental stress-induced protein complexes. Only three LHC homologues from C. velia grouped with the LHCs from red algae.
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页码:19 / 28
页数:10
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