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EMBARGOED BY NATURE FOR RELEASE: WED., AUGUST 13, 2003, 10 A.M. U.S. (PACIFIC) Media Contacts:
Mario Aguilera or Cindy Clark: (858) 534-3624 The Center for Marine Genomics at Scripps is a new center that will examine the genomes of diverse marine organisms to understand their adaptations to the marine environment.
Palenik says the paper is the first of a set in a Department
of Energy initiative aimed at understanding marine phytoplankton. It is
the beginning, Palenik says, of a program that is going to be important
for marine science by revealing how photosynthetic organisms fix carbon
in the marine environment and adapt to specific habitats within that environment. He also says Synechococcus, and not the other three genomes newly reported, can be genetically manipulated. Scripps Marine Biology Research Division scientist Bianca Brahamsha developed a way to remove specific genes to evaluate their functions. When she and Scripps graduate student Jay McCarren removed, or "knocked out," the gene for the large protein, the organism stopped swimming. "These organisms are known for their unique type of swimming," says Palenik, "and this newly uncovered fact will shed light on how these organisms can convert chemical energy into swimming motion." Palenik's group further showed that Synechococcus, compared with the other reported organisms, has a broader capability for using different compounds for growth. While the others clearly prefer low-light/high-nutrient or high-light/low-nutrient niches, Synechococcus exhibits "jack-of-all-trades," or generalist, characteristics by using various nitrogen and phosphorous compounds for growth. Finally, Palenik says the paper shows that Synechococcus displays a history of picking up foreign DNA and converting it into useful genes for its own purposes. Countering the reputation of the open ocean as an isolated, dilute environment, Palenik says this new evidence shows a high volume of organisms interacting with each other and with other viruses. "It's amazing," said Palenik, "that marine Synechococcus were only discovered in 1978. So in 25 years we've gone from not knowing they were there to suddenly knowing every base pair of DNA." (Prochlorococcus was discovered even later, in 1988.) Palenik believes such marine genomic information will help in the long run in understanding biodiversity and its conservation. "We've always been trying to understand how diverse our planet's organisms are," said Palenik. "These results are helping us do that. Starting to decipher whole genomes of different groups of organisms will help us understand how diverse they are and why they are diverse." In the same issue of Nature, a team led by Gabrielle
Rocap of the University of Washington reported extensive differences between
the genomes of two strains of Prochlorococcus and helps explain their
adaptation to different light and nutrient environments. That study included
coauthors from the Massachusetts Institute of In the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper, a team led by Frederick Partensky of the Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique, Station Biologique de Roscoff, reports on the genome of a third strain of Prochlorococcus. Coauthors of Palenik's research paper include, in addition to Brahamsha, McCarren, and Allen, Frank Larimer, Miriam Land, Loren Hauser, Patrick Chain, Jane Lamerdin, Wayne Regala, Ian Paulsen, Alexis Dufresne, Frederic Partensky, Eric Webb, and John Waterbury. Palenik's study was supported by the Biological and Environmental Research Program and the U.S. Department of Energy's Office (DOE) of Science. Additional support was provided by the DOE, the National Science Foundation, and the Margenes program of the European Community.
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