(Press-News.org) Contact information: David Gilbert
degilbert@lbl.gov
925-296-5643
DOE/Joint Genome Institute
A gluttonous plant reveals how its cellular power plant devours foreign DNA
Amborella trichopoda, a sprawling shrub that grows on just a single island in the remote South Pacific, is the only plant in its family and genus. It is also one of the oldest flowering plants, having branched off from others about 200 million years ago. Now, researchers from Indiana University, with the U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute (DOE JGI), Penn State University, and the Institute of Research for Development in New Caledonia, have determined a remarkable expansion of the genome of the plant's critical energy-generating structures. Its mitochondria, the plant's energy-producing organelles, in an epic demonstration of horizontal gene transfer, have acquired six genome equivalents of foreign DNA -- one from a moss, three from green algae and two from other flowering plants. It is the first time that an organelle has captured entire "foreign" genomes, those from other organisms, and the first description of a land plant acquiring genes from green algae.
"It swallowed whole genomes from other plants and algae as well as retained them in remarkably whole forms for eons," said Indiana's Palmer, the senior author of the findings published December 20 in the journal Science. This work reports on the extent of Amborella's genomic gluttony.
The DOE JGI Plant Program focuses on fundamental biology of photosynthesis, the conversion of solar to chemical energy, and the role of terrestrial plants and oceanic phytoplankton in global carbon cycling. Generating models such as the one cited in this published work provides an improved framework for further detailing the origin and mechanisms of mitochondrial fusion and gene transfer across eukaryotes -- plants, fungi, algae. The transfer of genes through wounding, as described in the paper, not only applies to those plants that live in harmony with Amborella but also parasites. By extension, the group of plant parasites that that drain resources from Amborella are representatives of the largest group that sap flowering plants worldwide. Another emphasis of the Plant Program is to understand healthy growth of candidate "biofuel crops" and the threats that plant pests present. The DOE JGI and its collaborators are building a compendium of gene annotation data sets that come to light through its collaborations and are made available through Phytozome and deposited into the DOE's Systems Biology Knowledgebase (KBase).
Sequencing the entire mitochondrial genome, initiated under the DOE JGI's Community Sequencing Program, was an effort that took eight years. To collect samples for study, researchers had to make the long trek to the only place the plant grows: Grande Terre, the main island of New Caledonia, a small nation 750 miles off the eastern coast of Australia.
Researchers' first attempts to sequence this DNA were not as productive as they had hoped. Although they were able to sequence the genes, the techniques they had to use to amplify the DNA didn't allow them to confidently construct a whole genome assembly. It meant going back to the drawing board and producing a second independent draft assembly of the genome, said Palmer. Indiana's Danny Rice, the paper's first author, then combined the two assemblies into a single, complete genome assembly.
"In short, getting a complete assembly of the Amborella mitochondrial genome took years and the effort of several people," said Palmer. "But it was well worth it, because the genome is so utterly unusual, amazing and full of surprises and mechanistic insights." The complete sequence was also necessary to rule out the possibility that any of the foreign DNA was the result of contamination or was integrated in the nucleus rather than the mitochondrion, Palmer said.
The DNA that the Amborella mitochondria absorbed and retained through horizontal gene transfer amounts to at least one million base pairs, with its mitochondrial genome now swollen to an enormous size of 3.9 million base pairs compared with typical plant mitochondrial genomes sizes of around 500,000. Animal mitochondria virtually stopped this process of gene transfer long ago.
The research provides strong evidence for the hypothesis that plant mitochondria can take up new traits by fusing with the mitochondria of other species. In Amborella, the mitochondria have ample opportunities to come into contact with mitochondria of other plants, for example epiphytes, plants that grow on other plants. When injured, Amborella often generates rapid growth at these locations, a virtual petri dish for mitochondria of different species to come into direct contact with each other. This, coupled with a low rate of losing mitochondrial genes over time, has created Amborella's huge mitochondrial DNA glut.
Palmer cited several motivating factors for plumbing the genomic entrails of Amborella's mitochondria. "Although they contain a relatively small number of genes, plant mitochondrial genomes are disproportionately important in terms of basic metabolism. This is because they encode most of the key proteins involved in respiration." He also pointed to defects in plant mitochondrial genes that can cause cytoplasmic male sterility -- when plants fail to produce functional pollen -- a critically important agronomic trait for hybrid seed production. He said that findings from plant mitochondrial genome studies can also be extrapolated to other mitochondrial genomes, to shed light, for instance, on the mechanisms of cellular aging.
INFORMATION:
The U.S. Department of Energy Joint Genome Institute, supported by the DOE Office of Science, is committed to advancing genomics in support of DOE missions related to clean energy generation and environmental characterization and cleanup. DOE JGI, headquartered in Walnut Creek, Calif., provides integrated high-throughput sequencing and computational analysis that enable systems-based scientific approaches to these challenges. Follow @doe_jgi on Twitter.
DOE's Office of Science is the largest supporter of basic research in the physical sciences in the United States, and is working to address some of the most pressing challenges of our time. For more information, please visit science.energy.gov
A gluttonous plant reveals how its cellular power plant devours foreign DNA
2013-12-20
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Charge order competes with superconductivity
2013-12-20
Charge order competes with superconductivity
Today in Science express: Charge carriers in cuprate high-Tc superconductors form nanostripes that suppress superconductivity, as shown by guest researchers from Princeton ...
Elucidating biological cells' transport mechanisms
2013-12-20
Elucidating biological cells' transport mechanisms
A new study focuses on the motion of motor proteins in living cells, applying a physicist's tool called non-equilibrium statistical mechanics
Motion fascinates physicists. It becomes even more intriguing when ...
How the cells remove copper
2013-12-20
How the cells remove copper
We are fundamentally dependent on the presence of copper in the cells of the body. Copper is actually part of the body's energy conversion and protective mechanisms against oxygen radicals, as well as part of the immune system, and it also has great ...
New research provides insight into epilepsy
2013-12-20
New research provides insight into epilepsy
Jørgen Kjems and Morten Trillingsgaard Venø, Department of Molecular Biology and Genetics and the Interdisciplinary Nanoscience Centre (iNANO), contribute to an article on microRNA-128 just published in Science. ...
EARTH Magazine: Navigating the risks of hazard research
2013-12-20
EARTH Magazine: Navigating the risks of hazard research
Alexandria, VA – When individuals die in a natural disaster or property damage is costly, can anyone be blamed? After the 2012 conviction of six Italian geoscientists on manslaughter charges related ...
Half of National Lottery in Spain sold at Christmas
2013-12-20
Half of National Lottery in Spain sold at Christmas
Sales of the National Lottery have fallen for the last five years, which shows that even the most traditional games have been affected by the economic crisis. In 2012, it collected 5.0163 billion euros, down 4.8% from 2011 ...
Neurobiology: The logistics of learning
2013-12-20
Neurobiology: The logistics of learning
Learning requires constant reconfiguration of the connections between nerve cells. Two new studies now yield new insights into the molecular mechanisms that underlie the learning process.
Learning and memory ...
Increasing personal savings, the 'Groundhog Day' way
2013-12-20
Increasing personal savings, the 'Groundhog Day' way
How a cyclical concept of time can boost your bank account
Thinking about time as a cycle of recurring experiences — a reality Bill Murray's character knows all too well in the movie ...
Early detection of blinding eye disease could be as easy as scanning a barcode
2013-12-20
Early detection of blinding eye disease could be as easy as scanning a barcode
New hand-held optical device to catch early signs of retinal disease
New data for engineering immune cells shows early promise in solid tumors
2013-12-20
New data for engineering immune cells shows early promise in solid tumors
PHILADELPHIA — Engineered immune cells, called CARTmeso cells, designed to direct antitumor immune responses toward tumors that carry a protein called mesothelin, showed ...