30 research outputs found
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Separate Introns Gained within Short and Long Soluble Peridinin-Chlorophyll a-Protein Genes during Radiation of Symbiodinium (Dinophyceae) Clade A and B Lineages
Correction:
21 Jan 2015: The PLOS ONE Staff (2015) Correction: Separate Introns Gained within Short and Long Soluble Peridinin-Chlorophyll a-Protein Genes during Radiation of Symbiodinium (Dinophyceae) Clade A and B Lineages. PLOS ONE 10(1): e0117735. https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0117735Here we document introns in two Symbiodinium clades that were most likely gained following divergence of this genus from other peridinin-containing dinoflagellate lineages. Soluble peridinin-chlorophyll a-proteins (sPCP) occur in short and long forms in different species. Duplication and fusion of short sPCP genes produced long sPCP genes. All short and long sPCP genes characterized to date, including those from free living species and Symbiodinium sp. 203 (clade C/type C2) are intronless. However, we observed that long sPCP genes from two Caribbean Symbiodinium clade B isolates each contained two introns. To test the hypothesis that introns were gained during radiation of clade B, we compared sPCP genomic and cDNA sequences from 13 additional distinct Caribbean and Pacific Symbiodinium clade A, B, and F isolates. Long sPCP genes from all clade B/B1 and B/B19 descendants contain orthologs of both introns. Short sPCP genes from S. pilosum (A/A2) and S. muscatinei (B/B4) plus long sPCP genes from S. microadriaticum (A/A1) and S. kawagutii (F/F1) are intronless. Short sPCP genes of S. microadriaticum have a third unique intron. Symbiodinium clade B long sPCP sequences are useful for assessing divergence among B1 and B19 descendants. Phylogenetic analyses of coding sequences from four dinoflagellate orders indicate that introns were gained independently during radiation of Symbiodinium clades A and B. Long sPCP introns were present in the most recent common ancestor of Symbiodinium clade B core types B1 and B19, which apparently diverged sometime during the Miocene. The clade A short sPCP intron was either gained by S. microadriaticum or possibly by the ancestor of Symbiodinium types A/A1, A3, A4 and A5. The timing of short sPCP intron gain in Symbiodinium clade A is less certain. But, all sPCP introns were gained after fusion of ancestral short sPCP genes, which we confirm as occurring once in dinoflagellate evolution
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Video Rate Molecular Imaging In Vivo with Stimulated Raman Scattering
Optical imaging in vivo with molecular specificity is important in biomedicine because of its high spatial resolution and sensitivity compared with magnetic resonance imaging. Stimulated Raman scattering (SRS) microscopy allows highly sensitive optical imaging based on vibrational spectroscopy without adding toxic or perturbative labels. However, SRS imaging in living animals and humans has not been feasible because light cannot be collected through thick tissues, and motion-blur arises from slow imaging based on backscattered light. In this work, we enable in vivo SRS imaging by substantially enhancing the collection of the backscattered signal and increasing the imaging speed by three orders of magnitude to video rate. This approach allows label-free in vivo imaging of water, lipid, and protein in skin and mapping of penetration pathways of topically applied drugs in mice and humans.Chemistry and Chemical Biolog
Separate introns gained within short and long soluble peridinin-chlorophyll a-protein genes during radiation of Symbiodinium (Dinophyceae) clade A and B lineages.
Here we document introns in two Symbiodinium clades that were most likely gained following divergence of this genus from other peridinin-containing dinoflagellate lineages. Soluble peridinin-chlorophyll a-proteins (sPCP) occur in short and long forms in different species. Duplication and fusion of short sPCP genes produced long sPCP genes. All short and long sPCP genes characterized to date, including those from free living species and Symbiodinium sp. 203 (clade C/type C2) are intronless. However, we observed that long sPCP genes from two Caribbean Symbiodinium clade B isolates each contained two introns. To test the hypothesis that introns were gained during radiation of clade B, we compared sPCP genomic and cDNA sequences from 13 additional distinct Caribbean and Pacific Symbiodinium clade A, B, and F isolates. Long sPCP genes from all clade B/B1 and B/B19 descendants contain orthologs of both introns. Short sPCP genes from S. pilosum (A/A2) and S. muscatinei (B/B4) plus long sPCP genes from S. microadriaticum (A/A1) and S. kawagutii (F/F1) are intronless. Short sPCP genes of S. microadriaticum have a third unique intron. Symbiodinium clade B long sPCP sequences are useful for assessing divergence among B1 and B19 descendants. Phylogenetic analyses of coding sequences from four dinoflagellate orders indicate that introns were gained independently during radiation of Symbiodinium clades A and B. Long sPCP introns were present in the most recent common ancestor of Symbiodinium clade B core types B1 and B19, which apparently diverged sometime during the Miocene. The clade A short sPCP intron was either gained by S. microadriaticum or possibly by the ancestor of Symbiodinium types A/A1, A3, A4 and A5. The timing of short sPCP intron gain in Symbiodinium clade A is less certain. But, all sPCP introns were gained after fusion of ancestral short sPCP genes, which we confirm as occurring once in dinoflagellate evolution
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ReichmanJayBotanyPlantPathologySeparateIntronsGained_SupportingInformation.zip
Here we document introns in two Symbiodinium clades that were most likely gained following divergence of this genus
from other peridinin-containing dinoflagellate lineages. Soluble peridinin-chlorophyll a-proteins (sPCP) occur in short and
long forms in different species. Duplication and fusion of short sPCP genes produced long sPCP genes. All short and long
sPCP genes characterized to date, including those from free living species and Symbiodinium sp. 203 (clade C/type C2) are
intronless. However, we observed that long sPCP genes from two Caribbean Symbiodinium clade B isolates each contained
two introns. To test the hypothesis that introns were gained during radiation of clade B, we compared sPCP genomic and
cDNA sequences from 13 additional distinct Caribbean and Pacific Symbiodinium clade A, B, and F isolates. Long sPCP genes
from all clade B/B1 and B/B19 descendants contain orthologs of both introns. Short sPCP genes from S. pilosum (A/A2) and S.
muscatinei (B/B4) plus long sPCP genes from S. microadriaticum (A/A1) and S. kawagutii (F/F1) are intronless. Short sPCP
genes of S. microadriaticum have a third unique intron. Symbiodinium clade B long sPCP sequences are useful for assessing
divergence among B1 and B19 descendants. Phylogenetic analyses of coding sequences from four dinoflagellate orders
indicate that introns were gained independently during radiation of Symbiodinium clades A and B. Long sPCP introns were
present in the most recent common ancestor of Symbiodinium clade B core types B1 and B19, which apparently diverged
sometime during the Miocene. The clade A short sPCP intron was either gained by S. microadriaticum or possibly by the
ancestor of Symbiodinium types A/A1, A3, A4 and A5. The timing of short sPCP intron gain in Symbiodinium clade A is less
certain. But, all sPCP introns were gained after fusion of ancestral short sPCP genes, which we confirm as occurring once in
dinoflagellate evolution
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ReichmanJayBotanyPlantPathologySeparateIntronsGained.pdf
Here we document introns in two Symbiodinium clades that were most likely gained following divergence of this genus
from other peridinin-containing dinoflagellate lineages. Soluble peridinin-chlorophyll a-proteins (sPCP) occur in short and
long forms in different species. Duplication and fusion of short sPCP genes produced long sPCP genes. All short and long
sPCP genes characterized to date, including those from free living species and Symbiodinium sp. 203 (clade C/type C2) are
intronless. However, we observed that long sPCP genes from two Caribbean Symbiodinium clade B isolates each contained
two introns. To test the hypothesis that introns were gained during radiation of clade B, we compared sPCP genomic and
cDNA sequences from 13 additional distinct Caribbean and Pacific Symbiodinium clade A, B, and F isolates. Long sPCP genes
from all clade B/B1 and B/B19 descendants contain orthologs of both introns. Short sPCP genes from S. pilosum (A/A2) and S.
muscatinei (B/B4) plus long sPCP genes from S. microadriaticum (A/A1) and S. kawagutii (F/F1) are intronless. Short sPCP
genes of S. microadriaticum have a third unique intron. Symbiodinium clade B long sPCP sequences are useful for assessing
divergence among B1 and B19 descendants. Phylogenetic analyses of coding sequences from four dinoflagellate orders
indicate that introns were gained independently during radiation of Symbiodinium clades A and B. Long sPCP introns were
present in the most recent common ancestor of Symbiodinium clade B core types B1 and B19, which apparently diverged
sometime during the Miocene. The clade A short sPCP intron was either gained by S. microadriaticum or possibly by the
ancestor of Symbiodinium types A/A1, A3, A4 and A5. The timing of short sPCP intron gain in Symbiodinium clade A is less
certain. But, all sPCP introns were gained after fusion of ancestral short sPCP genes, which we confirm as occurring once in
dinoflagellate evolution
Sizes of <i>Symbiodinium sPCP</i> exons, introns, genomic CDS and cDNA CDS (bp).
<p>Sizes of <i>Symbiodinium sPCP</i> exons, introns, genomic CDS and cDNA CDS (bp).</p
Maps showing the organization of <i>Symbiodinium sPCP</i> tandem genes containing introns and the corresponding cDNAs.
<p>(A) Long <i>sPCP</i> genes from clade B/B1 and B19 descendant isolates contained two introns. The CDS identified in genomic and cDNA clones was ∼1.1 kb. (B) Short <i>sPCP</i> genes from <i>S. microadriaticum</i> (clade A/A1) had one intron and the CDS was ∼600 bp.</p
Average pair-wise distances of <i>Symbiodinium</i> Clade B nuclear ITS1-5.8S-ITS2, CA4.86, Si15 and long <i>sPCP</i> sequences.
<p>Average pair-wise distances of <i>Symbiodinium</i> Clade B nuclear ITS1-5.8S-ITS2, CA4.86, Si15 and long <i>sPCP</i> sequences.</p