
doi: 10.2307/1543561
pmid: 12700156
Symbiotic associations are fundamental to the survival of many organisms on Earth. The ability of the symbiont to perform key biochemical functions often allows the host to occupy environments that it would otherwise find inhospitable. This can have profound impacts upon the diversification and distribution of the host. Cellular organelles (chloroplasts and mitochondria) represent the final stages of integration of endosymbionts. These organelles were of critical importance to the evolution and success of eukaryotic lineages on our planet because they allowed the host cells to harness light energy and to thrive in the presence of oxygen. The marine photosymbiotic associations that we study represent an earlier stage in the process of symbiont integration-one in which the photobiont can still be removed from the host and exist on its own. These systems are of interest to us for two reasons. First, they are ecologically important in the marine environment where they occur. These organisms form zones of photosynthetic production in oceanic regions typically low in nutrients. Second, investigation of these interactions may shed light on the molecular and evolutionary mechanisms involved in the integration of cells and their genomes.
Source: Biodiversity Heritage Library, Eukaryota, Gene Expression, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Biodiversity, Genomics, Source: https://biodiversitylibrary.org, Dinoflagellida, Source: BHL, Animals, RNA, BHL-Corpus, Symbiosis
Source: Biodiversity Heritage Library, Eukaryota, Gene Expression, Nucleic Acid Hybridization, Biodiversity, Genomics, Source: https://biodiversitylibrary.org, Dinoflagellida, Source: BHL, Animals, RNA, BHL-Corpus, Symbiosis
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