Claudio Slamovits

Author's posts

Taxonomic and Bioactivity Characterizations of <em>Mameliella alba</em> Strain LZ-28 Isolated from Highly Toxic Marine Dinoflagellate <em>Alexandrium catenella</em> LZT09

Microalgae host varied microbial consortium harboring cross-kingdom interactions with fundamental ecological significance in aquatic ecosystems. Revealing the complex biofunctions of the cultivable bacteria of phycosphere microbiota is one vital basis for deeply understanding the mechanisms governing these dynamic associations. In this study, a new light-yellow pigmented bacterial strain LZ-28 was isolated from the highly-toxic and harmful algal bloom-forming dinoflagellate Alexandrium catenella…

The characterization of novel monomeric creatine kinases in the early branching Alveolata species, Perkinsus marinus: Implications for phosphagen kinase evolution

The genome of the unicellular molluscan parasite Perkinsus marinus contains at least five genes coding for putative creatine kinases (CK), a phosphoryl transfer enzyme which plays a key role in cellular energy transactions. Expression and kinetic analyses of three of the P. marinus CKs revealed them to be true CKs with catalytic properties in the range of typical metazoan CKs. A sequence comparison of the P. marinus CKs with a range of CK dimers and other dimeric phosphoryl transfer enzymes in…

The in-situ release of algal bloom populations and the role of prokaryotic communities in their establishment and growth

Harmful algal blooms (HABs) may quickly travel and inoculate new water bodies via currents and runoff in estuaries. The role of in-situ prokaryotic communities in the re-establishment and growth of inoculated algal blooms remains unknown. A novel on-board incubation experiment was employed to simulate the sudden surge of algal blooms to new estuarine waters and reveal possible outcomes. A dinoflagellate (Amphidinium carterae) and a diatom species (Thalassiosira weissflogii) which had bloomed in…

Alignment-Free Analysis of Whole-Genome Sequences From Symbiodiniaceae Reveals Different Phylogenetic Signals in Distinct Regions

Dinoflagellates of the family Symbiodiniaceae are predominantly essential symbionts of corals and other marine organisms. Recent research reveals extensive genome sequence divergence among Symbiodiniaceae taxa and high phylogenetic diversity hidden behind subtly different cell morphologies. Using an alignment-free phylogenetic approach based on sub-sequences of fixed length k (i.e. k-mers), we assessed the phylogenetic signal among whole-genome sequences from 16 Symbiodiniaceae taxa (including…

Bioinformatics of Corals: Investigating Heterogeneous Omics Data from Coral Holobionts for Insight into Reef Health and Resilience

Coral reefs are home to over two million species and provide habitat for roughly 25% of all marine animals, but they are being severely threatened by pollution and climate change. A large amount of genomic, transcriptomic, and other omics data is becoming increasingly available from different species of reef-building corals, the unicellular dinoflagellates, and the coral microbiome (bacteria, archaea, viruses, fungi, etc.). Such new data present an opportunity for bioinformatics researchers and…

Development of a novel TaqMan qPCR assay for rapid detection and quantification of Gymnodinium catenatum for application to harmful algal bloom monitoring in coastal areas of Tunisia

Gymnodinium catenatum is a dinoflagellate known to cause paralytic shellfish poisoning (PSP), commonly associated with human muscular paralysis, neurological symptoms, and, in extreme cases, death. In the present work, we developed a real-time PCR-based assay for the rapid detection of the toxic microalgal species, G. catenatum, in environmental bivalve mollusc samples as well as seawater samples. G. catenatum-specific primers and probe were designed on the ITS1-5.8S-ITS2 rDNA region. Hydrolysis…

An overview of transcription in dinoflagellates

Dinoflagellates are a vital diverse family of unicellular algae widespread in various aquatic environments. Typically large genomes and permanently condensed chromosomes without histones make these organisms unique among eukaryotes in terms of chromatin structure and gene expression. Genomic and transcriptomic sequencing projects have provided new insight into the genetic foundation of dinoflagellate behaviors. Genes in tandem arrays, trans-splicing of mRNAs and lower levels of transcriptional…

Population genomics for symbiotic anthozoans: can reduced representation approaches be used for taxa without reference genomes?

Population genetic studies of symbiotic anthozoans have been historically challenging because their endosymbioses with dinoflagellates have impeded marker development. Genomic approaches like reduced representation sequencing alleviate marker development issues but produce anonymous loci, and without a reference genome, it is unknown which organism is contributing to the observed patterns. Alternative methods such as bait-capture sequencing targeting Ultra-Conserved Elements are now possible but…

Bioinformatic prediction of putative metallothioneins in non-ciliate protists

Intracellular ligands that bind heavy metals (HMs) and thereby minimize their detrimental effects to cellular metabolism are attracting great interest for a number of applications including bioremediation and development of HM-biosensors. Metallothioneins (MTs) are short, cysteine-rich, genetically encoded proteins involved in intracellular metal-binding and play a key role in detoxification of HMs. We searched approximately 700 genomes and transcriptomes of non-ciliate protists for novel…

Fatal affairs – conjugational transfer of a dinoflagellate-killing plasmid between marine Rhodobacterales

The roseobacter group of marine bacteria is characterized by a mosaic distribution of ecologically important phenotypes. These are often encoded on mobile extrachromosomal replicons. So far, conjugation had only been experimentally proven between the two model organisms Phaeobacter inhibens and Dinoroseobacter shibae. Here, we show that two large natural RepABC-type plasmids from D. shibae can be transferred into representatives of all known major Rhodobacterales lineages. Complete genome…