A sample of green algae collected from the Gulf of Mexico. Credit: Image courtesy of The University of Alabama
The discovery of a deep-water seaweed that evolved into a multi-cellular plant more than 540 million years ago has added a new branch to the tree of life, according to a biologist at The University of Alabama.
Dr. Juan Lopez-Bautista, professor of biological sciences at UA, co-authored a study of algae collected from the Gulf of Mexico that revealed a significantly different cellular structure than first believed. The finding, published Monday in Scientific Reports, details the unique order, known as Palmophyllales, examined by Lopez-Bautista and post-doctoral researchers at UA and how it diverged to create its own lineage.
“For many years, more than a century, there was speculation that the primordial green algae were single cells, like phytoplankton,” Lopez-Bautista said. “And in our work, these very strange groups of algae that live deep in the oceans, they’re not single cells — they actually aggregate inside of a jelly. It gives us an idea of how the most ancient green plants will look like.
“When you try to figure out how things evolve, now we have a point of comparison. This is the first group that evolved, and they have these specific features, and now all green plants (sea and land-based) will be compared to them. At the same time, we discovered this is the deepest branching of the tree of life, and this is a group that hasn’t been recognized, so we created a new class for it.”
Lopez-Bautista was principal investigator in a large National Science Foundation project designed to discover and describe various types of green algae. Lopez-Bautista’s lab, Phycolab, in Mary Harmon Bryant Hall, received $600,000 of the $2.76 million NSF grant to determine where algae fit in the evolutionary chain. The funding was used to hire post-doctoral researchers and map the genomes of the algae collected from the gulf. Additional samples and phylogenetic software allowed for more comparisons to other algae and plants and helped researchers pinpoint when Palmophyllales branched off from related plant species.
Find your dream job in the space industry. Check our Space Job Board »
Lopez-Bautista spotted the bright, green algae while taking an oceanographic cruise a few years ago. He said there were existing studies of an ancient group of algae but no clear answer to where it belonged in the tree of life.
“I knew we had the technologies at our lab at The University of Alabama to answer that question,” he said. “And the techniques and software used to map chloroplast genomes advanced over the last few years, cutting down the time for analysis from weeks to days.
“We are going to the edge of science.”
The discovery has opened many new questions about why the algae diversified nearly 540 million years ago. Lopez-Bautista said there are many findings to compare and habitats to explore to and that he’ll continue to pursue funding for bio-diversity research.
He plans to present findings from the study in Italy, Mexico and Colombia in the coming weeks.
“I’ve been a reviewer on NSF panels many times,” Lopez-Bautista said. “And when I’ve asked what will it take for NSF to fund our research proposal, what I was told always sticks with me: ‘is it research that will change our textbooks?’ To do that, it has to be highly significant. I think this will rewrite the history of the green plants.”
Source: The University of Alabama
Journal References:
- Frederik Leliaert, Ana Tronholm, Claude Lemieux, Monique Turmel, Michael S. DePriest, Debashish Bhattacharya, Kenneth G. Karol, Suzanne Fredericq, Frederick W. Zechman, Juan M. Lopez-Bautista.Chloroplast phylogenomic analyses reveal the deepest-branching lineage of the Chlorophyta, Palmophyllophyceae class. nov..Scientific Reports, 2016; 6: 25367 DOI: 10.1038/srep25367