• Title/Summary/Keyword: molecular species

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Morphology and phylogenetic relationships of Micractinium (Chlorellaceae, Trebouxiophyceae) taxa, including three new species from Antarctica

  • Chae, Hyunsik;Lim, Sooyeon;Kim, Han Soon;Choi, Han-Gu;Kim, Ji Hee
    • ALGAE
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    • v.34 no.4
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    • pp.267-275
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    • 2019
  • Three new species of the genus Micractinium were collected from five localities on the South Shetland Islands in maritime Antarctica, and their morphological and molecular characteristics were investigated. The vegetative cells are spherical to ellipsoidal and a single chloroplast is parietal with a pyrenoid. Because of their simple morphology, no conspicuous morphological characters of new species were recognized under light microscopy. However, molecular phylogenetic relationships were inferred from the concatenated small subunit rDNA, and internal transcribed spacer (ITS) sequence data indicated that the Antarctic microalgal strains are strongly allied to the well-supported genus Micractinium, including M. pusillum, the type species of the genus, and three other species in the genus. The secondary structure of ITS2 and compensatory base changes were used to identify and describe six Antarctic Micractinium strains. Based on their morphological and molecular characteristics, we characterized three new species of Micractinium: M. simplicissimum sp. nov., M. singularis sp. nov., and M. variabile sp. nov.

Ultrastructural and Molecular Characterization of Surirella atomus Hustedt 1955 (Bacillariophyta, Surirellalceae), A Newly Recorded Species in Korea

  • An, Sung Min;Noh, Jae Hoon;Kim, Ji Hoon;Kang, Nam Seon
    • Ocean and Polar Research
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    • v.43 no.4
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    • pp.245-253
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    • 2021
  • Surirella atomus Hustedt 1955, surirelloid diatom, were obtained from Hampyeong Bay, Mu-an, in the west coast of Korea. We describe the first record of S. atomus in Korea and report its ultrastructure and molecular characteristics for the first time. For molecular analysis, rbcL gene and cob gene were sequenced. This species is very small in size, making it difficult to observe its morphological features under a light microscope. Even with a scanning electron microscope, it has no unique structure in the valve. It is morphologically very simple. This rare species was known as a marine benthic species. However, it appears to be widely distributed in marine, freshwater, and brackish environments according to the literature documenting this species. In terms of phylogeny, S. atomus has been tentatively linked to Petrodictyon gemma, but the phylogenetic placement of S. atomus seems to be still uncertain, in a manner that is similar to S. febigeri. However, morphological observations derived from this study suggest that this species belongs to the genus Surirella.

Mayamaea vietnamica sp. nov.: a new, terrestrial diatom (Bacillariophyceae) species from Vietnam

  • Kezlya, Elena;Glushchenko, Anton;Kociolek, John Patrick;Maltsev, Yevhen;Martynenko, Nikita;Genkal, Sergei;Kulikovskiy, Maxim
    • ALGAE
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    • v.35 no.4
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    • pp.325-335
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    • 2020
  • A new diatom species, Mayamaea vietnamica sp. nov., is described from Cát Tiên National Park in Vietnam. This species was discovered and described from soil samples. Algae from soil ecosystems in Vietnam are almost unknown. The new species is described on the basis of an integrated approach with molecular and morphological data, and comparison with similar species. In terms of molecular data, 18S rDNA (including V4 domain), and partial rbcL plastid genes show M. vietnamica sp. nov. is most closely related to M. terrestris N. Abarca and R. Jahn, and together they form a monophyletic group relative to other members of the genus. M. vietnamica sp. nov. differs from other species in the genus by the number of striae and areolae in 10 ㎛, number of areolae per stria, as well as shape and presence or absence of axial and central areas.

Molecular Characterization of Protease Producing Idiomarina Species Isolated from Peruvian Saline Environments

  • Flores-Fernandez, Carol N.;Chavez-Hidalgo, Elizabeth;Santos, Marco;Zavaleta, Amparo I.;Arahal, David R.
    • Microbiology and Biotechnology Letters
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    • v.47 no.3
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    • pp.401-411
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    • 2019
  • All Idiomarina species are isolated from saline environments; microorganisms in such extreme habitats develop metabolic adaptations and can produce compounds such as proteases with an industrial potential. ARDRA and 16S rRNA gene sequencing are established methods for performing phylogenetic analysis and taxonomic identification. However, 16S-23S ITS is more variable than the 16S rRNA gene within a genus, and is therefore, used as a marker to achieve a more precise identification. In this study, ten protease producing Idiomarina strains isolated from the Peruvian salterns were characterized using biochemical and molecular methods to determine their bacterial diversity and industrial potential. In addition, comparison between the length and nucleotide sequences of a 16S-23S ITS region allowed us to assess the inter and intraspecies variability. Based on the 16S rRNA gene, two species of Idiomarina were identified (I. zobellii and I. fontislapidosi). However, biochemical tests revealed that there were differences between the strains of the same species. Moreover, it was found that the ITS contains two tRNA genes, $tRNA^{Ile(GAT)}$ and $tRNA^{Ala(TGC)}$, which are separated by an ISR of a variable size between strains of I. zobellii. In one strain of I. zobellii (PM21), we found nonconserved nucleotides that were previously not reported in the $tRNA^{Ala}$ gene sequences of Idiomarina spp. Thus, based on the biochemical and molecular characteristics, we can conclude that protease producing Idiomarina strains have industrial potential; only two I. zobellii strains (PM48 and PM72) exhibited the same properties. The differences between the other strains could be explained by the presence of subspecies.

Phylogeny of Korean Isolates of Phytophthora Species Based on Sequence Analysis of Internal Transcribed Spacer of Ribosomal DNA

  • Hong, Seung-Beom;Jee, Hyeong-Jin;Kim, Sang-Hee;Go, Seung-Joo
    • The Plant Pathology Journal
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    • v.16 no.1
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    • pp.29-35
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    • 2000
  • The internal transcribed spacer regions (ITS I, 5.8S and ITS II) of the ribosomal DNAs were amplified from Korean isolates of Phytophthora spp. and sequenced to characterize them. Sequences from 33 isolates previously identified as P. boehmeriae, P. cactprum, P. cambivora, P. capsici, P. cinnamomi, P. erythroseptica, P. infestans, P. megasperma, P. melonis, P. nicotianae, P. palmivora and P. sojae were compared with published sequences, and a phylogenetic tree was produced. All isolates belonging to 10 species, P. cactorum, P. cambivora, P. capsici, P. cinnamomi P. citricola, P. infestans, P. nicotianae, P. palmivora and P. sojae were clearly clustered into published isolates of each species above 97% bootstrap value. Cucurbits isolates of Phytophthora previously identified as either P. melonis or P. drechsleri showed distinct evolutionary lineages from the P. megasperma was closely related to isolates of P. cryptogea-P. drechsleri showed distinct evolutionary lineages from the P. cryptogea-P. drechsleri complex group, indicating that P. melonis is a valid species. A Korean isolate of P. megasperma was closely related to isolates of P. erythroseptica showed distant genetic relationship with published isolates of P. erythroseptica (CBS 956.87). It is probable that the two Korean isolates could be genetically different from foreign isolates or misidentified. A grouping of species according to ITS sequence divergence matched, to some degree, the broad classification based on type of papilla. However, a separation of semi-papillate species and papillate species was not wvident in this study.

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Interspecific Hybrids from Wild $\times$ Cultivated Triticum Crosses - A Study on the Cytological Behaviour and Molecular Relations -

  • Bhagyalakshmi, Kari;Vinod, Kunnummal Kurungara;Kumar, Mahadevan;Arumugachamy, Samudrakani;Prabhakaran, Amala Joseph;Raveendran, Thondikulam Subramanian
    • Journal of Crop Science and Biotechnology
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    • v.11 no.4
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    • pp.257-262
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    • 2008
  • Genetic diversity of cultivated wheat is narrowing down and is increasingly becoming non-complacent in tackling new pathogenic races and adverse environmental situations. Wild relatives of wheat are rich repositories of beneficial genes that are capable of defying adverse situations. However, these wild species are not readily crossable with cultivated ones. The present study attempted to cross three wild wheat species as females with three cultivated species of varying ploidy to understand the intricate behaviour of hybrids in relation to cytology, morphology, and molecular recombination. Post-fertilization barriers caused hybrid recovery in wild species in contrast to cultivated species. Triticum monococcum did not produce hybrids in any of the crosses. Various degrees of chromosome anomalies and hybrid sterility were seen with hybrids of T. timopheevi and T. sphaerococcum. Cytoplasmic factors were suspected to add more to the abnormality. G genome from T. timopheevi could enhance more pairing between Band D of cultivated species. Precocity of certain chromosomes in laggard formation was evident, pointing towards evolutionary self balance of the genomes which prevented homeologous pairing. They are eliminated in hybrids. Molecular diversity clearly corroborated with genetic proximity of the species, which distinguished themselves by maintaining the genome homeology.

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Cryptic species diversity of the red algal genus Callophyllis (Kallymeniaceae, Gigartinales) from Korea

  • Lee, Hyung Woo;Kim, Myung Sook
    • Journal of Ecology and Environment
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    • v.37 no.4
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    • pp.395-410
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    • 2014
  • The genus Callophyllis is recorded as six separate species with imprecise species delimitation in Korea. To elucidate the species boundaries of Korean Callophyllis, we performed morphological observations and molecular analyses, and included three Japanese Callophyllis species from the type locality. From the results of molecular analyses using plastid rbcL and mitochondrial COI-5P genes, we confirmed ten Callophyllis species, including five cryptic ones: C. adhaerens, C. adnata, C. crispata, and C. japonica from Korea and Japan; C. hayamensis as an unrecorded species from Korea; C. cartilaginea, C. mollitia, C. repens, C. serratifolia, and C. undulata as new species from Korea. There were no Korean specimens that matched C. adnata or C. crispata from Japan, except Korean C. japonica, which formed a genetic group with the Japanese species. We obtained the interspecific divergences among the five cryptic species as 0.6-4.5% in rbcL and 2.8-8.4% in COI-5P. We recognized that the species diversity of Callophyllis has been underestimated from the northwestern Pacific region. The species boundary of Callophyllis from Korea and Japan will be a cornerstone to revealing the phylogenetic affinity of the genus distributed in both hemispheres of the western Pacific.

The Shrimps (Crustacea: Decapoda) of Ulreung Island, Korea (울릉도 해역의 새우류(갑각 상강: 십각 목))

  • Kim, Won;Moon, Seung-Yeo
    • The Korean Journal of Zoology
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    • v.37 no.2
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    • pp.262-266
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    • 1994
  • The three species, Synolpheus tumidomanus, Spirontocaris orcuota, Heptacarpus futilirostris, are added to the shrimp fauna of the Ulreung Island.S. turn idomanus was reported one time in Korean waters without redescription, and the present report is the second. Heptocawus futilirostris is newly recorded from the East Sea in Korean waters. With the five previously known species, the total eight species are listed and 5. tumidomanus is redescribed.

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Molecular Species of Triglycerides in Sunflower Seed Oil (해바라기씨 기름의 triglyceride분자종에 관한 연구)

  • Cheon, Seok-Jo;Park, Yeung-Ho
    • Journal of the Korean Society of Food Science and Nutrition
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    • v.16 no.4
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    • pp.311-316
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    • 1987
  • From the results of triglyceride composition and the fatty acid at ${\beta}-position$ of glycerol, triglyceride molecular species of sunflower seed oil were found to be 26 kinds. The major triglyceride molecular species in sunflower seed oil were identified to PLL; 10.4%, OLL; 22.3%, and characterized that LLL species existed more than 31% of the total triglyceride molecular specie.

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DNA Fingerprinting of Jute Germplasm by RAPD

  • Hossain, Mohammad Belayat;Haque, Samiul;Khan, Haseena
    • BMB Reports
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    • v.35 no.4
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    • pp.414-419
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    • 2002
  • The genotype characteristic of cultivars was investigated, along with varieties of both of the jute species, Corchorus olitorius and Corchorus capsularis, in the germplasm collection at the Bangladesh Jute Research Institute (BJRI). DNA fingerprinting was generated for 9 different varieties and 12 accessions of jute cultivars by using random amplified polymorphic DNA(RAPD). A total of 29 arbitrary oligonucleotide primers were screened. Seven primers gave polymorphism within the varieties, and 6 primers detected polymorphism within the accessions that were tested. A dendrogram was engendered from these data, and this gave a distinct clustering of the cultivated species of jute. Therefore, we generated RAPD markers, which are species-specific. These primers can distinguish between C. olitorius and C. capsularis. From the dendrogram that we generated between the various members of these two species, we found the existing genetic classification that agrees with our molecular marking data. A different dendrogram showed that jute accessions could be clustered into three groups. These data will be invaluable in the conservation and utilization of the genetic pool in the germplasm collection.