We report the cloning and characterization of a 1881 bp
Thalassiosira weissflogii (Bacillariophyceae, Centrales) plastid
genomic fragment
containing the ferredoxin gene (petF) and several other genes.
The organization of this fragment is exactly the same as its equivalent
region from the plastid genome of another centric diatom,
Odontella sinensis, and the sequences share high homology in both
coding and
non-coding regions. Traces of a probable vestigial protein-coding
gene and of a partial trn gene are found just after the trnR
gene in both
diatoms as well as in the plastid genome of the red alga
Porphyra purpurea, illustrating the close relationship between
red algal and
heterokont algal plastid genomes and arguing in favour of the origin
of the latter by secondary endosymbiosis. In accordance with
phylogenetic analyses of most plastid genes, phylogenetic trees
inferred from 69 ferredoxin sequences show that both the green and the
red algal plastid genes arose from cyanobacterial genes; our results
furthermore suggest that each of these plastid lineages is related to
different extant cyanobacterial genes, implying either that different
endosymbiotic events were responsible for the origin of green and red
plastids or that each lineage kept only one (and a different one) of
several paralogous cyanobacterial genes present in the ancestral
cyanobacterial genome.