
pmid: 19556510
Green for Diatoms Diatoms account for 20% of global carbon fixation and, together with other chromalveolates (e.g., dinoflagellates and coccolithophorids), represent many thousands of eukaryote taxa in the world's oceans and on the tree of life. Moustafa et al. (p. 1724 ; see the Perspective by Dagan and Martin ) have discovered that the genomes of diatoms are highly chimeric, with about 10% of their nuclear genes being of foreign algal origin. Of this set of 1272 algal genes, 253 were, as expected, from a distant red algal secondary endosymbiont, but more than 1000 of the genes were derived from green algae and predated the red algal relationship. These protist taxa are important not only for genetic and genomic investigations but also for their potential in biofuel and nanotechnology applications and in global primary productivity in relation to climate change.
Cell Nucleus, Diatoms, Genome, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Biological Evolution, Genes, Chlorophyta, Rhodophyta, Plastids, Symbiosis, Biologie, Phylogeny
Cell Nucleus, Diatoms, Genome, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Biological Evolution, Genes, Chlorophyta, Rhodophyta, Plastids, Symbiosis, Biologie, Phylogeny
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