Phylogenomic resolution of marine to freshwater dinoflagellate transitions

Mahara Mtawali 1
Elizabeth C Cooney 1
Jayd Adams 1
Joshua Jin 1
Corey C Holt 1, 2
Patrick J. Keeling 1
Publication typeJournal Article
Publication date2025-02-21
scimago Q1
wos Q1
SJR3.973
CiteScore21.8
Impact factor10.0
ISSN17517362, 17517370
Abstract

Dinoflagellates are an abundant and diverse group of protists that inhabit aquatic environments worldwide. They are characterized by numerous unique cellular and molecular traits, and have adapted to an unusually broad range of life strategies, including phototrophy, heterotrophy, parasitism, and all combinations of these. For most microbial groups, transitions from marine to freshwater environments are relatively rare, as changes in salinity are thought to lead to significant osmotic challenges that are difficult for the cell to overcome. Recent work has shown that dinoflagellates have overcome these challenges relatively often in evolutionary time, but because this is mostly based on single gene trees with low overall support, many of the relationships between freshwater and marine groups remain unresolved. Normally, phylogenomics could clarify such conclusions, but despite the recent surge in data, virtually no freshwater dinoflagellates have been characterized at the genome-wide level. Here, we generated 30 transcriptomes from cultures and single cells collected from freshwater environments to infer a robustly supported phylogenomic tree from 217 conserved genes, resolving at least seven transitions to freshwater in dinoflagellates. Mapping the distribution of ASVs from freshwater environmental samples onto this tree confirms these groups and identifies additional lineages where freshwater dinoflagellates likely remain unsampled. We also sampled two species of Durinskia, a genus of “dinotoms” with both marine and freshwater lineages containing Nitzschia-derived tertiary plastids. Ribosomal RNA phylogenies show that the host cells are closely related, but their endosymbionts are likely descended from two distantly-related freshwater Nitzschia species that were acquired in parallel and relatively recently.

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Mtawali M. et al. Phylogenomic resolution of marine to freshwater dinoflagellate transitions // ISME Journal. 2025.
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Mtawali M., Cooney E. C., Adams J., Jin J., Holt C. C., Keeling P. J. Phylogenomic resolution of marine to freshwater dinoflagellate transitions // ISME Journal. 2025.
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TY - JOUR
DO - 10.1093/ismejo/wraf031
UR - https://academic.oup.com/ismej/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ismejo/wraf031/8029727
TI - Phylogenomic resolution of marine to freshwater dinoflagellate transitions
T2 - ISME Journal
AU - Mtawali, Mahara
AU - Cooney, Elizabeth C
AU - Adams, Jayd
AU - Jin, Joshua
AU - Holt, Corey C
AU - Keeling, Patrick J.
PY - 2025
DA - 2025/02/21
PB - Oxford University Press
SN - 1751-7362
SN - 1751-7370
ER -
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@article{2025_Mtawali,
author = {Mahara Mtawali and Elizabeth C Cooney and Jayd Adams and Joshua Jin and Corey C Holt and Patrick J. Keeling},
title = {Phylogenomic resolution of marine to freshwater dinoflagellate transitions},
journal = {ISME Journal},
year = {2025},
publisher = {Oxford University Press},
month = {feb},
url = {https://academic.oup.com/ismej/advance-article/doi/10.1093/ismejo/wraf031/8029727},
doi = {10.1093/ismejo/wraf031}
}