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Silicofossil Group -News
Diatoms: Algae with Animal traits
- Science, 1 Oct., 2004
The discovery of urea cycle in the genome sequence
of Thalassiosira pseudonana
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Algae with animal
traits
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The diatom DNA sequencing project,
funded by the U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) and conducted
at the DOE Joint Genome Institute, provides insight
into how the diatom species Thalassiosira pseudonana
prospers in the marine environment while it contributes
to absorbing the major greenhouse gas CO2, in amounts
comparable to all the world's tropical rain forests
combined.
"This critical information enables
us to better understand the vital role that diatoms
and other phytoplankton play in mediating global warming,"
says Dan Rokhsar, who heads computational genomics at
the JGI and is one of the co-authors of a research article
in the Oct. 1 issue of Science. "Now that we have a
glimpse at the inner workings of diatoms, we're better
positioned to understand how changes in their population
numbers will translate into environmental changes and
the global carbon management picture.
"These organisms are incredibly important
in the global carbon cycle," says Virginia Armbrust,
a University of Washington associate professor of oceanography
and lead author of the Science paper. Together, the
single-celled organisms generate as much as 40 percent
of the 50 billion to 55 billion tons of organic carbon
produced each year in the sea and in the process use
carbon dioxide and produce oxygen. And they are an important
food source for many other marine organisms.
Scientists would like to better understand
how these organisms react to changes in sea temperatures,
the amount of light penetrating the oceans, and nutrients.
"Oceanographers thought we understood
how diatoms use nitrogen, but we discovered they have
a urea cycle, something no one ever suspected," Armbrust
says. A urea cycle is a nitrogen waste pathway found
in animals and has never before been seen in a photosynthetic
eukaryote like a diatom, she says. Nitrogen is crucial
for diatom growth and is often in short supply in seawater,
depending on ocean conditions. The genome work revealed
that the diatom Thalassiosira pseudonana has the genes
to produce urea-cycle enzymes that may help to reduce
its dependence on nitrogen from the surrounding waters.
The genome work also shed additional
light on how this diatom species uses fats, or lipids,
which it is known to store in huge amounts.
"Learning the actual pathways they
use to metabolize their fats helps explain the ability
of diatoms to withstand long periods with little sunlight
- even to overwinter - and then start growing really
rapidly once they return to sunlight," she says.
Three or four microns in width--as
many as 70 could fit in the width of a human hair--Thalassiosira
pseudonana is among the smallest diatoms. Like its brethren,
it is encased by a frustule, a rigid cell wall delicately
marked with pores in patterns distinctive enough for
scientists to tell the species apart. Another new finding
reported in Science concerns the unusual way the diatom
metabolizes silicon to form its characteristically ornate
silica frustule.
"Diatoms can manipulate silica in ways
that nanotechnologists can only dream about. If we understood
how they can design and build their patterned frustule
as part of their biology, perhaps this could be adapted
by humans," Rokhsar says.
Scientists on the project, which includes
46 researchers from 26 institutions, also considered
the evolutionary implications revealed by the genomic
work. The research provided direct genetic confirmation
of a hypothesis that diatoms evolved when a heterotroph,
a single-cell microbe, engulfed what scientists say
was likely a kind of red alga. The two became one organism,
an arrangement called endosymbiosis, and swapped some
genetic material to create a new hybrid genome.
"This project helps illustrate the
amazing diversity of life on our planet," Armbrust says.
"Diatoms display features traditionally thought to be
restricted to animals and other features thought to
be restricted to plants. Diatoms, with complete disregard
for these presumed boundaries, have mixed and matched
different attributes to create an incredibly successful
microorganism. It's exciting to imagine the novelty
in the oceans that still awaits our discovery."
Original press release from the Doe Joint
Genome Institute
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