Publication | Open Access
Intracellular Spheroid Bodies of Rhopalodia gibba Have Nitrogen-Fixing Apparatus of Cyanobacterial Origin
146
Citations
16
References
2004
Year
Molecular BiologyCyanothece SpCyanobacteriaEndosymbiosisPhylogenetic AnalysisUnicellular OrganismRhopalodia GibbaMicrobial EcologyNitrogen FixationEnvironmental MicrobiologyIntracellular Spheroid BodiesProkaryotic SystemProtistCyanobacterial OriginBiologyNatural SciencesSpheroid BodiesMicrobiologySymbiosisMedicine
Nitrogen fixation is not regarded as a eukaryotic invention. The process has only been reported as being carried out by bacteria. These prokaryotes typically interact with their eukaryotic hosts as extracellular and temporary nonobligate nitrogen-fixing symbionts. However, intracellular permanent "spheroid bodies" have been reported within the fresh-water diatom Rhopalodia gibba, and these, too, have been speculated as being able to provide nitrogen to their host diatom. These spheroid bodies have gram-negative characteristics with thylakoids. We demonstrate that they fix nitrogen under light conditions. We also show that phylogenetic analyses of their 16rRNA and nif D genes predict that their genome is closely related to that of Cyanothece sp. ATCC 51.142, a free-living diazotrophic cyanobacterium. We suggest that the intracellular spheroid bodies of Rhopalodia gibba may represent a vertically transmitted, permanent endosymbiotic stage in the transition from a free-living diazotrophic cyanobacterium to a nitrogen-fixing eukaryotic organelle.
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