Journal article

Chlamydiae as symbionts of photosynthetic dinoflagellates

J Maire, A Collingro, K Tandon, VJ Jameson, LM Judd, M Horn, LL Blackall, MJH van Oppen

Isme Journal | Published : 2024

Abstract

Chlamydiae are ubiquitous intracellular bacteria and infect a wide diversity of eukaryotes, including mammals. However, chlamydiae have never been reported to infect photosynthetic organisms. Here, we describe a novel chlamydial genus and species, Candidatus Algichlamydia australiensis, capable of infecting the photosynthetic dinoflagellate Cladocopium sp. (originally isolated from a scleractinian coral). Algichlamydia australiensis was confirmed to be intracellular by fluorescence in situ hybridization and confocal laser scanning microscopy and temporally stable at the population level by monitoring its relative abundance across four weeks of host growth. Using a combination of short- and l..

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Grants

Awarded by Universität Wien


Funding Acknowledgements

This research was supported by the Australian Research Council (FL180100036 to M.J.H.v.O.), the Austrian Science Fund FWF (P32112 to A.C.), the CDF Visiting Fellowship Program by the Australian Institute of Marine Science (to M.H. and A.C.), an Early Career Research grant from the University of Melbourne (to J.M.), a Global Collaboration Award from the University of Melbourne (to J.M.), and the Native Australian Animals Trust (to J.M.). K.T. is supported by the Australian Research Council (DP200101613).