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Symbiotic interactions were key to the evolution of chloroplast and mitochondria organelles, which mediate carbon and energy metabolism in eukaryotes. Biological nitrogen fixation, the reduction of abundant atmospheric nitrogen gas (N 2 ) to biologically available ammonia, is a key metabolic process performed exclusively by prokaryotes. Candidatus Atelocyanobacterium thalassa, or UCYN-A, is a metabolically streamlined N 2 -fixing cyanobacterium previously reported to be an endosymbiont of a marine unicellular alga. Here we show that UCYN-A has been tightly integrated into algal cell architecture and organellar division and that it imports proteins encoded by the algal genome. These are characteristics of organelles and show that UCYN-A has evolved beyond endosymbiosis and functions as an early evolutionary stage N 2 -fixing organelle, or “nitroplast.”
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Tyler H. Coale
University of California, Santa Cruz
Valentina Loconte
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Kendra A. Turk‐Kubo
University of California, Santa Cruz
Science
University of California, San Francisco
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
University of California, Santa Cruz
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Coale et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/68e6f722b6db6435876720ba — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1126/science.adk1075
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