Journal article
Alveolate mitochondrial metabolic evolution: Dinoflagellates force reassessment of the role of parasitism as a driver of change in apicomplexans
JC Danne, SG Gornik, JI MacRae, MJ McConville, RF Waller
Molecular Biology and Evolution | Published : 2013
Abstract
Mitochondrial metabolism is central to the supply of ATP and numerous essential metabolites in most eukaryotic cells. Across eukaryotic diversity, however, there is evidence of much adaptation of the function of this organelle according to specific metabolic requirements and/or demands imposed by different environmental niches. This includes substantial loss or retailoring of mitochondrial function in many parasitic groups that occupy potentially nutrient-rich environments in their metazoan hosts. Infrakingdom Alveolata comprises a well-supported alliance of three disparate eukaryotic phyla-dinoflagellates, apicomplexans, and ciliates. These major taxa represent diverse lifestyles of free-li..
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Awarded by Australian Research Council
Funding Acknowledgements
This work was supported by Australian Research Council Discovery grants (DP1093395 and DP0663590); the National Health and Medical Research Council; and the University of Melbourne Science Faculty Scholarship and David Hay Postgraduate Writing-Up Award to J.C.D. M.J.M. is a NHMRC Principal Research Fellow. Patrick Keeling kindly provided access to cDNA clones for ESTs used in this work, and Nicholas Beevers provided Hematodinium dinospore RNA.