Ostreococcus
Scientific classification Edit this classification
(unranked): Viridiplantae
Division: Chlorophyta
Class: Mamiellophyceae
Order: Mamiellales
Family: Bathycoccaceae
Genus: Ostreococcus
C. Courties & M.-J. Chrétiennot-Dinet (1995)
Species

Ostreococcus is a genus of unicellular coccoid or spherically shaped green algae belonging to the class Mamiellophyceae. It includes prominent members of the global picoplankton community, which plays a central role in the oceanic carbon cycle.

History

The first member of the genus, O. tauri, was discovered in 1994 in an investigation of the picoplankton in the Thau lagoon by Courties and Chretiennot-Dinet using flow cytometry.[1] Unicellular photosynthetic organisms are generally amenable to study using flow cytometry because of the autofluorescence provided by chlorophyll and other fluorophores used by the cells for the harvesting and control of sunlight, which allows such pigments to be studied without any staining of the cells. The different pigments present can be distinguished and identified on a cell-by-cell basis using flow cytometry, allowing researchers to deduce the different species present in the sample and help classify any new species found.[2] O. tauri was immediately placed in the class Prasinophyceae based on the presence of characteristic chlorophyll pigments and Chlorophyceae-related carotenoids[1] as well as cell ultrastructure, and its position was later confirmed by analysis of its 18S rDNA.[3] Molecular phylogenetic analysis based on the 18SrDNA sequence led the definition of a new class, the Mamiellophyceae, that contains Ostreococcus species and placed them within the Bathycoccaceae family.[4] Mamiellophyceae represent one of the ecologically most successful groups of eukaryotic, photosynthetic picoplankters in marine and likely also freshwater environments. Metagenomic[5] and metabarcoding[6] surveys revealed the presence of other members of the genus Ostreococcus in many oceanic regions. Four different species have been described to date : O. tauri, O. lucimarinus,[7] O. mediterraneus [8] and O spp. RCC809.[9]

Anatomy

The genus contains the smallest known free-living eukaryotic species, with an average size of 0.8 µm.[1] The ultrastructure of cells in this genus have so far been characterised by remarkable simplicity, being coccoid cells lacking a cell wall and containing a single chloroplast, a single mitochondrion, and a single Golgi body as well as its nucleus.[1] The genome sequence of three members of this genus is available: the 13 Mb nuclear genome of O. tauri RCC4221 published in 2006 [10] and updated 2014;[11] O. lucimarinus CCMP2514 [7] and strain RCC809.[9] The draft metabolic networks of these two Ostreococcus species were reconstructed from the KEGG database, thermodynamically constrained, elementally balanced, and functionally evaluated in 2012.[12]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 Courties, C. et al. (1994). "Smallest eukaryotic organism" Nature 370: 255
  2. Davey, H.M. and Kell, D.B. (1996) "Flow cytometry and cell sorting of heterogeneous microbial populations: The importance of single-cell analyses" Microbiological Reviews 60 (4): 641-696
  3. Courties, C. et al. (1998). "Phylogenetic analysis and genome size of Ostreococcus tauri (Chlorophyta, Prasinophyceae)" J. Phycol. 34 (5): 844-849.
  4. Marin B, Melkonian M. (2010). Molecular phylogeny and classification of the Mamiellophyceae class. nov. (Chlorophyta) based on sequence comparisons of the nuclear- and plastid-encoded rRNA operons. Protist. 161(2):304-36. doi: 10.1016/j.protis.2009.10.002.
  5. Piganeau G, Moreau H. (2007). Screening the Sargasso Sea metagenome for data to investigate genome evolution in Ostreococcus. Gene. 406:184-90 doi:10.1016/j.gene.2007.09.015
  6. Demir-Hilton E et al. (2011). Global distribution patterns of distinct clades of the photosynthetic picoeukaryote Ostreococcus. ISME J. 5(7):1095-107. doi: 10.1038/ismej.2010.209.
  7. 1 2 The tiny eukaryote Ostreococcus provides genomic insights into the paradox of plankton speciation. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 104: 7705–7710. doi: 10.1073/pnas.0611046104
  8. Subirana L, et al. (2013). Morphology, genome plasticity, and phylogeny in the genus ostreococcus reveal a cryptic species, O. mediterraneus sp. nov. (Mamiellales, Mamiellophyceae). Protist. 164(5):643-59. doi: 10.1016/j.protis.2013.06.002.
  9. 1 2 "Home - Ostreococcus sp. RCC809".
  10. Derelle, E. et al. (2006). "Genome analysis of the smallest free-living eukaryote Ostreococcus tauri unveils many unique features" Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 103: 11647-52.
  11. Blanc-Mathieu R, et al. (2014). An improved genome of the model marine alga Ostreococcus tauri unfolds by assessing Illumina de novo assemblies. BMC Genomics. 15:1103. doi: 10.1186/1471-2164-15-1103.
  12. Elias W. Krumholz,et al. (2012). "Genome-wide metabolic network reconstruction of the picoalga Ostreococcus" Journal of Experimental Botany 63(6): 2353-2362 .
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