Wednesday, January 18, 2012

Studies on the Genus Mesodinium and Description of Mesodinium chamaeleon

Studies on the Genus Mesodinium I: Ultrastructure and Description of Mesodinium chamaeleon n. sp., a Benthic Marine Species with Green or Red Chloroplasts - Moestrup - 2012 - Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology - Wiley Online Library

Scanning electron micrographs of Mesodinium chamaeleon n. sp. Photo: Øjvind Moestrup/The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology

ABSTRACT. We provide here the description of a new marine species that harbors green or red chloroplasts. In contrast to certain other species of the genus, Mesodinium chamaeleon n. sp. can be maintained in culture for short periods only. It captures and ingests flagellates including cryptomonads. The prey is ingested very rapidly into a food vacuole without the cryptomonad flagella being shed and the trichocysts being discharged. The individual food vacuoles subsequently serve as photosynthetic units, each containing the cryptomonad chloroplast, a nucleus, and some mitochondria. The ingested cells are eventually digested. This type of symbiosis differs from other plastid-bearing Mesodinium spp. in retaining ingested cryptomonad cells almost intact. The food strategy of the new species appears to be intermediate between heterotrophic species, such as Mesodinium pulex and Mesodinium pupula, and species with red cryptomonad endosymbionts, such as Mesodinium rubrum.

Monday, October 11, 2010

Organism with biggest genome ever

Paris japonica is native to sub-alpine regions of Japan. It is the organism with the largest genome known today, about 150 billion base pairs long. Photo: Alpsdake/Wikimedia
Scientist have discovered that a rare japanese flower, Paris japonica has the largest genome known in any organism, about 150 billion base pairs long. That is 50 times the size of the human genome, which contains just over 3 billion DNA base pairs.
The information is published in the Botanical Journal of the Linnean Society.
Until now the recordholder of the biggest genome was the marbled lungfish, Protopterus aethiopicus with 130 billion DNA base pairs.

Read more
The largest eukaryotic genome of them all?
ScienceShot: Biggest Genome Ever