J D. H, D M. A, D L. E, D B: Inoflagellates A Remarkable Evolutionary Experiment
J D. H, D M. A, D L. E, D B: Inoflagellates A Remarkable Evolutionary Experiment
DINOFLAGELLATES:
A REMARKABLE EVOLUTIONARY
EXPERIMENT1
In this paper, we focus on dinoflagellate ecology, toxin production, fossil record, and a molecular phylogenetic analysis of hosts
and plastids. Of ecological interest are the swimming and feeding behavior, bioluminescence, and symbioses of dinoflagellates with
corals. The many varieties of dinoflagellate toxins, their biological effects, and current knowledge of their origin are discussed.
Knowledge of dinoflagellate evolution is aided by a rich fossil record that can be used to document their emergence and diversification.
However, recent biogeochemical studies indicate that dinoflagellates may be much older than previously believed. A remarkable feature
of dinoflagellates is their unique genome structure and gene regulation. The nuclear genomes of these algae are of enormous size, lack
nucleosomes, and have permanently condensed chromosomes. This chapter reviews the current knowledge of gene regulation and
transcription in dinoflagellates with regard to the unique aspects of the nuclear genome. Previous work shows the plastid genome of
typical dinoflagellates to have been reduced to single-gene minicircles that encode only a small number of proteins. Recent studies
have demonstrated that the majority of the plastid genome has been transferred to the nucleus, which makes the dinoflagellates the
only eukaryotes to encode the majority of typical plastid genes in the nucleus. The evolution of the dinoflagellate plastid and the
implications of these results for understanding organellar genome evolution are discussed.
Key words:
The dinoflagellates (division Pyrrhophyta, class Dinophyceae) are an important group of phytoplankton in marine and
fresh waters. Their adaptation to a wide variety of environments is reflected by a tremendous diversity in form and nutrition and an extensive fossil record dating back several hundred million years (Graham and Wilcox, 2000). As swimming
cells, they can flourish under conditions that are unsuitable for
many nonmotile phytoplankton, a success due in part to unique
behavior patterns, including diel vertical migration (migration
through the water column on a 24-h cycle). Some dinoflagellates produce toxins that are dangerous to man, marine mammals, fish, seabirds, and other components of the marine food
chain (Van Dolah, 2000). Others are bioluminescent and emit
light; some function as parasites or symbionts that rely on host
organisms for part of their nutrition. Many dinoflagellates are
photosynthetic and, through endosymbiosis, have acquired a
wide diversity of plastids from distant evolutionary lineages.
The most common plastid in dinoflagellates has been subject
to drastic evolutionary changes that we are only beginning to
understand. An equal number of dinoflagellates obtain their
carbon by ingesting other phytoplankton. Many are now being
shown to have both of these traitsi.e., to be mixotrophic. It
is thus no surprise that these organisms have been extensively
studied and classified as plants by some workers and as animals by others.
General characteristicsWhether living as a swimming,
solitary cell or a nonmotile symbiont within an invertebrate
host, all living dinoflagellates have certain common characteristics (Steidinger, 1983). Most photosynthetic species contain
chlorophylls a and c2, the carotenoid beta-carotene, and a
group of xanthophylls that appears to be unique to dinoflagellates, typically peridinin, dinoxanthin, and diadinoxanthin.
1
4
These pigments give many dinoflagellates their typical goldenbrown color. However, some dinoflagellates have acquired other pigments through endosymbiosis, including fucoxanthin
(see the following plastid discussion). Two different cell types
can be distinguished on the basis of the cell-wall covering or
theca. The naked or unarmored forms have an outer plasmalemma surrounding a single layer of flattened vesicles.
These cells are fragile and distort easily. Armored dinoflagellates have cellulose or other polysaccharides within each vesicle, giving the cells a more rigid, inflexible wall. These cellulose plates are arranged in distinct patterns (called tabulation), which are extensively used as taxonomic fingerprints. For a detailed discussion of dinoflagellate taxonomy,
see Fensome et al. (1993). The dinoflagellate nucleus is unique
in several ways, as elaborated in more detail later. The chromosomes, for example, are easily visible at all stages of
growth because they do not go through coiling and uncoiling,
as is common in other phytoplankton, but instead remain permanently condensed. Dinoflagellates also have few or no nucleosomes associated with their DNA and a unique pattern of
mitosis (Spector, 1984). Because these characteristics are so
different from both eukaryotic and prokaryotic cells, a new
intermediate kingdom, Mesokaryota, was once proposed for
them (Dodge, 1965). Yet another distinguishing characteristic
of dinoflagellates is that their motile cells have two unequal
flagella. One is a flattened, ribbon-like flagellum, which encircles the cell in a transverse groove, providing propulsive
and spinning force for the cell. The other flagellum is directed
posteriorly along a longitudinal groove and presumably acts
like a rudder for steering. Although all dinoflagellates share
certain physiological and structural characteristics, they exhibit
a tremendous diversity in external morphology. Some cells are
small and smoothly spherical, whereas others have elaborate
structures that resemble horns, wings, collars, or even arms
and hands with fingers.
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Fig. 1. An illustration of the dinoflagellate (Dn) Protoperidinium depressum feeding on a chain of diatoms (Dt) using a pallium, a retractile organelle
that spreads over the long spines of diatoms so that the contents can be digested. Illustration by D. M. Jacobson (reproduced from Jacobson, 1987).
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same species, which may relate to the hypothesis that the ability to produce the toxins actually lies in symbiotic bacteria and
not the dinoflagellate (Silva, 1978; Kodama et al., 1988; Vasquez et al., 2001). Some researchers have suggested that bacteria associated with Alexandrium are capable of producing
saxitoxins (Gallacher et al., 1997; Vasquez et al., 2001),
whereas others argued that toxin production ability remains
when all symbiotic bacteria have been removed (Hold et al.,
2001). In this context, it is of note that the ability to produce
saxitoxins has also been acquired by other organisms not
closely related to Alexandrium. These include the dinoflagellates Gymnodinium catenatum (Oshima et al., 1993; Sako et
al., 2001) and Pyrodinium bahamense var compressum (Usup
et al., 1994), the cyanobacteria Aphanizomenon flos-aquae
(Pereira et al., 2000) and Planktothrix sp. (Pomati et al., 2000),
and other bacteria (Kodama et al., 1988; Levasseur et al.,
1996). The explanation for the acquisition of toxin producing
ability by such disparate organisms may be related to the apparent ease with which this trait has been acquired and lost
within Alexandrium (Lilly, 2003).
Another important dinoflagellate toxin family is the brevetoxins, a suite of polycyclic ether compounds produced by
Karenia brevis (Van Dolah, 2000). Brevetoxins bind with high
affinity to the sodium channel, resulting in persistent activation
and prolonged channel opening. As with saxitoxins, the brevetoxins are a family of compounds that exhibit different potencies. Brevetoxins can accumulate in filter-feeding shellfish,
causing NSP, but other impacts occur because K. brevis is an
unarmored dinoflagellate, and thus the cells are easily lysed.
Released toxin can quickly be lethal to fish and other marine
animals that are not filter feeders. Fish mortalities from K.
brevis blooms (often true red tides) can be massive, involving
tens of millions of wild fish of all types. Another impact from
brevetoxins is a result of inhalation of aerosolized toxin in sea
spray, which causes irritation and burning of the throat and
upper respiratory tract of exposed humans. Marine mammals,
especially the endangered Florida manatee, have recently been
shown to be susceptible to brevetoxin ingestion or even inhalation (OShea et al., 1991).
Another family of polyether toxins is called the ciguatoxins
(reviewed by Lehane and Lewis, 2000). These originate in the
dinoflagellate Gambierdiscus toxicus, which has an epiphytic
existence, living attached to seaweeds and other surfaces. Herbivorous fish accumulate the lipid-soluble toxin, which is
passed up the food chain to higher predators, and ultimately
to human consumers. It is estimated that over 50 000 people
are affected annually (Ragelis, 1984). The ciguatoxins are
structurally related to the brevetoxins and compete with brevetoxin for a site on the voltage-dependent sodium channel. The
definition of ciguatera is complicated by the fact that G. toxicus is only one member of a diverse assemblage of benthic
or epiphytic dinoflagellates, many of which produce toxins.
Unlike the planktonic dinoflagellates, toxicity in the benthic
coral reef dinoflagellates is common (Anderson and Lobel,
1987).
The diarrhetic shellfish toxins responsible for DSP are another class of polyether compounds produced by some species
in the genera Dinophysis and Prorocentrum. This toxin class
consists of at least eight congeners, including okadaic acid
(van Dolah, 2000). These compounds are inhibitors of Ser/Thr
protein phosphatases, which are critical components of signaling cascades in eukaryotic cells that regulate an array of
cellular processes. Diarrhea associated with DSP is most likely
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et al., 2003). Shared characteristics of the photosynthetic organelle (plastid) among chromalveolates and evidence from
plastid gene analyses have led to the hypothesis that this organelle originated through secondary endosymbiosis of a red
alga in their common ancestor (see the dinoflagellate plastids
discussion).
Deciphering the internal relationships among dinoflagellates
has been much more difficult. Most studies have focused on
photosynthetic taxa, although recently, several important studies involving heterotrophic species have been published. Analyses of multiple proteins have shown the heterotrophic Oxyrrhis marina and the parasitic Perkinsus marinus are sister to
the rest of the dinoflagellate lineage (Saldarriaga et al., 2003).
Environmental PCR studies have revealed an amazing diversity of unidentified organisms that branch at the base of the
dinoflagellates in phylogenetic trees. Using 18S rDNA amplified from seawater samples of picoplankton, Lopez-Garca et
al. (2001) and Moon-van der Staay et al. (2001) revealed diverse lineages that branch between Perkinsus and the dinoflagellates. Lopez-Garca et al. (2001) discovered two well-supported clades of unidentified alveolates (one of which might
be Syndiniales; Saldarriaga et al., 2001) at the base of the
dinoflagellates, and they hypothesize this could reconcile the
discrepancy between the dinoflagellate fossil record and the
biogeochemical evidence (i.e., dinosteranes) for pre-mesozoic
dinoflagellates. These small alveolates may have been responsible for the pre-mesozoic production of dinosteranes and are
either not well preserved in the fossil record or have been
misidentified as prokaryotes (Lopez-Garca et al., 2001). These
unidentified alveolates were discovered in aphotic regions of
the water column, indicating they are heterotrophic.
Molecular analyses using small subunit (SSU) rDNA have
been unable to resolve many relationships within the dinoflagellates, even though they have included a broad taxon sampling (Saunders et al., 1997; Gunderson et al., 1999; Saldarriaga et al., 2001). Analyses of the large subunit (LSU) rDNA
have included fewer taxa but show greater phylogenetic support and resolve several major dinoflagellate clades (Daugbjerg et al., 2000). However, the relationships among these
clades remain unclear, including relationships within the gymnodinoid, peridinoid, and prorocentroid groups (GPP complex,
Saunders et al., 1997). Figure 2 is a schematic tree representing the current knowledge of dinoflagellate relationships using
molecular data. Molecular analyses have generally supported
the relationships determined using morphological characters
(Fensome et al., 1999; Daugbjerg et al., 2000).
Dinoflagellate genetic structure and gene regulationDinoflagellates possess a number of remarkable genetic characteristics that distinguish them from other eukaryotes (reviewed
in Rizzo, 1991). One of the most striking features is the large
amount of cellular DNA that they contain. Most eukaryotic
algae contain on average about 0.54 pg DNA/cell1, whereas
estimates of dinoflagellate DNA content range from 3250 pg/
cell1 (Spector, 1984), corresponding to approximately 3000
215 000 Mb (in comparison, the haploid human genome is
3180 Mb and hexaploid Triticum wheat is 16 000 Mb). It has
been suggested that polyploidy or polyteny may account for
this large cellular DNA content (Beam and Himes, 1984), but
studies of DNA reassociation kinetics do not support this hypothesis. In the heterotrophic dinoflagellate Crypthecodinium
cohnii, about one-half of the genome is comprised of unique
sequences (13 copies) interspersed with repeats of approxi-
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indicate that the RNA editing mechanism observed in dinoflagellates arose independently, early in the dinoflagellate lineage
(Lin et al., 2002; Gray, 2003).
The unique physical features of dinoflagellate chromosomes
are likely to affect both gene transcription and regulation. Dinoflagellate DNA is packaged at a protein : DNA ratio of 1 :
10, unlike the equimolar ratios found in other eukaryotes. Experimental evidence has indicated that the DNA is organized
into two chromosomal regions: a main body composed of genetically inactive or silent DNA and a peripheral, diffuse
region containing transcriptionally active DNA. This has been
demonstrated through incorporation of tritiated adenine (Sigee,
1984), immunological detection of Z-DNA (which assists in
unraveling chromosomal material) in extrachromosomal loops
(Soyer-Gobillard et al., 1990), and mild restriction endonuclease digestion of isolated intact nuclei (Anderson et al., 1992).
Dinoflagellate basic nuclear proteins have a much lower affinity for DNA than do common core histones (Vernet et al.,
1990), and psoralen cross-linking reveals that only 20% of the
genome is in protected regions that are organized in 1015kbp units separated by unprotected longer regions (Yen et al.,
1978). Taken together, these findings have confirmed an earlier
hypothesis (Soyer and Haapala, 1974) that transcription of active DNA occurs extrachromosomally where DNA processing
enzymes may access the sequences outside of the condensed
chromosomes. Furthermore, these findings have illustrated the
unusual higher-order DNA structure present in the dinoflagellate nucleus. The timely expression of genes is directly related
to such higher-order structures (for review, see Getzenberg et
al., 1991).
All of these data indicate that the organization and regulation of dinoflagellate genes is very different from that of most
other eukaryotes. Given the vast quantities of DNA in their
cells, our basic knowledge of eukaryotic genetics and gene
expression could be significantly increased by understanding
dinoflagellates gene structure and transcriptional regulation.
Unfortunately, it is the quantity of chromosomal DNA that has
hampered genetic studies of dinoflagellates. DNA content
makes it difficult to perform simple genomic hybridizations
like Southern blots and impractical to construct genomic libraries or to consider sequencing the genome. To date, all of
the data regarding gene regulation mechanisms in dinoflagellates has emerged sporadically, from studies of specific genes
that are of interest for a particular function. The application
of genomic technologies, such as expressed sequence tag
(EST) sequencing and global gene expression profiling methods, would enable us to learn about many genes or transcripts
simultaneously, even in uncharacterized systems like dinoflagellates. Global gene expression analyses have already been
used to identify redox-regulated genes in the dinoflagellate,
Pyrocystis lunula (Okamoto and Hastings, 2003).
The plastids of dinoflagellatesAmong eukaryotes, acquisition of a photosynthetic organelle appears to be a rare event.
The first plastid was probably acquired once from a cyanobacterium in the common ancestor of glaucophytes, red algae,
and green algae (including land plants; Bhattacharya and Medlin, 1995). Reduction of the endosymbiont genome, gene
transfer to the host nucleus, and evolution of a protein import
system ensued to establish the primary plastid that is found in
these lineages (McFadden, 1999). Secondary endosymbiosis
has probably occurred three times, contributing plastids to
chlorarachniophytes and euglenids (likely through independent
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phylogeny and robustly supports a derived position of K. brevis and K. micrum among peridinin-containing taxa (H. Zhang,
D. Bhattacharya, S. Lin, unpublished data). If, as it now seems
substantiated, the fucoxanthin-containing dinoflagellates are
derived from a peridinin-containing ancestor, it will be important to determine the fate of the nuclear-encoded plastid genes
in this and other tertiary plastid-containing lineages. Have
these organisms retained their nuclear-encoded plastid genes,
replaced them by transfers from the haptophyte endosymbiont,
or eliminated them in favor of plastid-encoded homologs? This
question has been answered for one gene, psbO, which is in
the nucleus and appears to originate through lateral transfer
from the haptophyte endosymbiont in K. brevis (Ishida and
Green, 2002).
Other plastids in dinoflagellatesThere are three additional
plastid types in dinoflagellates that are particularly significant
because they may illustrate intermediate stages of endosymbiosis. Several dinoflagellates contain kleptoplasts, temporary plastids stolen from prey through myzocytosis (Schnepf
and Elbrachter, 1999). A heterotrophic dinoflagellate consuming photosynthetic eukaryotic prey may be the first stage in
plastid endosymbiosis (Schnepf, 1993). Members of the genus
Dinophysis are perhaps in the earliest stages of plastid acquisition through endosymbiosis. Photosynthetic members of this
genus contain a plastid of cryptophyte origin, which was originally determined by analyses of ultrastructural and pigment
characteristics (Schnepf and Elbrachter, 1988; Vesk et al.,
1996). Recently, several studies have confirmed the cryptophyte origin of the plastid with molecular data (Takashita et
al., 2002; Hackett et al., 2003; Jansen and Graneli, 2003).
However, there are some significant differences between the
cryptophyte and Dinophysis plastids. The cryptophyte plastid
is surrounded by four membranes and contains a nucleomorph,
a remnant of the red algal endosymbiont nucleus. In contrast,
only two membranes surround the plastid of Dinophysis sp.
and the nucleomorph is absent. Importantly, many genes that
are necessary to maintain the plastid are coded in the nucleomorph of cryptophytes (Douglas et al., 2001). This apparent
lack of a nucleomorph and the fact that Dinophysis species do
not survive for long in cell culture have raised the possibility
that the plastid of Dinophysis is a kleptoplast. Unfortunately,
molecular studies have been unable to resolve this issue due
to low levels of polymorphism in both plastid and nuclear
genes, and an unresolved tree of the host cells (Takishita et
al., 2002; Guillou et al., 2002; Hackett et al., 2003; Janson
and Graneli, 2003). Current data indicated that, either the plastid of Dinophysis is a kleptoplast that is acquired from the
same species of cryptophyte present around the world, or it is
a permanent plastid and the genus shows little sequence divergence. Analyses of more variable plastid loci and comparison to a resolved host tree will be required to conclusively
answer this question.
The second plastid is that of Peridinium foliaceum and P.
balticum, for which the plastid originated from a diatom and
contains fucoxanthin as the main carotenoid (Chesnick et al.,
1996, 1997). The diatom endosymbiont is clearly a permanent
plastid, as this species grows autotrophically in culture. These
dinoflagellates contain a three-membrane-bound structure
called the stigma, or eyespot, that may be the remnant of the
original peridinin plastid, although it contains no photopigments (Withers et al., 1977). The endosymbiont is separated
from the dinoflagellate host by a single membrane. Amazingly,
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it still maintains a nucleus, mitochondria, ribosomes, and plastids within the ER lumen (Schnepf and Elbrachter, 1999).
These species appear to represent an intermediate stage of endosymbiosis between engulfment and reduction of the endosymbiont to a small nucleus (the nucleomorph) and the plastid,
as in cryptophytes and chloroarachniophytes. If there has been
gene transfer from the diatom nucleus to the dinoflagellate
nucleus in these species, this would indicate that a protein
import system has evolved, which is a critical step in converting an endosymbiont into an organelle.
The final known plastid type is the prasinophyte plastid of
Lepidodinium viride (Watanabe et al., 1987). This is the only
plastid in the dinoflagellates that comes from outside the red
plastid lineage, contains the photopigment prasinoxanthin, and
lacks peridinin and fucoxanthin (Watanabe et al., 1991). As in
Dinophysis, only two membranes surround this plastid, and
other endosymbiont components are absent with the exception
of ribosomes. In this species, the endosymbiont nucleus is absent, indicating that all genes necessary for maintenance of
this plastid have been transferred to the nucleus of the dinoflagellate and reduction of the endosymbiont is complete. The
two membrane-bound tertiary plastids in Lepidodinium and
Dinophysis raise important questions about protein movement
to the plastid. Have these organisms evolved a new set of
protein import signals or have they possibly reverted to using
the two-membrane import signal of primary plastid lineages?
It is clear that the dinoflagellates possess the most diverse
array of plastids of any eukaryotic lineage. Whereas some data
indicate that the most common peridinin plastid arose through
secondary endosymbiosis from a red alga, it is interesting to
note that no plastids have yet been found in lineages at the
base of the dinoflagellates (Perkinsus and Oxyrrhis). In addition, a large group of unidentified alveolates, which are likely
to be heterotrophic, has been discovered at aphotic depths in
the ocean (Lopez-Garca et al., 2001; Moon-van der Staay et
al., 2001). These organisms also group near the base of the
dinoflagellates in phylogenetic analyses. Photosynthetic dinoflagellates are not monophyletic, so the peridinin plastid was
probably present early in dinoflagellate evolution and was lost
as many as eight times in the radiation of the group (Saldarriaga et al., 2001). However, it is still unclear whether the
presence of aplastidial lineages at the base of the dinoflagellates indicates that these taxa lost plastids independently or
dinoflagellates experienced an early aplastidial phase. This
would mean that the peridinin plastid arose through tertiary
endosymbiosis, rather than being directly descended from a
red algal secondary endosymbiosis. It is now clear that the
peridinin plastid is related to the red algal/chromist plastids;
however, current data cannot distinguish between these two
possibilities. Recent studies have begun to clarify plastid evolution in the dinoflagellates, but many aspects of plastid evolution in this group remain to be resolved.
ConclusionsScientific interest in the dinoflagellates has
risen dramatically because of the increased frequency (or our
enhanced ability of detection) and severity of toxic blooms
and because of the important role these organisms play in the
health of coral reefs. In the near future, application of genomic
techniques will help the scientific community investigate many
important aspects of these organisms and provide insights into
ecology, cell biology, gene expression, and toxicity. Genomics
has already shed light on the complex evolution of their plastid
genomes and revealed the migration of the plastid genome to
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