Morphological and molecular studies of Sphaerospermopsis torques-reginae (Cyanobacteria, Nostocales) from South American water blooms


Autoria(s): Werner, Vera Regina; Laughinghouse, Haywood Dail; Fiore, Marli Fatima; Sant'Anna, Celia Leite; Hoff, Caroline; de Souza Santos, Kleber Renan; Neuhaus, Emanuel Bruno; Reis Molica, Renato Jose; Honda, Ricardo Yukio; Omar Echenique, Ricardo
Contribuinte(s)

UNIVERSIDADE DE SÃO PAULO

Data(s)

04/11/2013

04/11/2013

2012

Resumo

Sphaerospermopsis torques-reginae (Komarek) Werner, Laughinghouse IV, Fiore & Sant'Anna comb. nov. was originally described as Anabaena torques-reginae Komarek from planktonic populations of Cuban eutrophic environments, characterized by twisted trichomes with spherical akinetes adjacent to the heterocytes. Recently, using molecular analyses, all planktonic Anabaena Bory ex Bornet & Flahault morphospecies were transferred into the genus Dolichospermum (Ralfs ex Bornet & Flahault) Wacklin el al., including Dolichospermum torques-reginae (Komarek) Wacklin et al. However, by a polyphasic characterization of strains of Anabaena reniformis Lemmermann and Aphanizomenon aphanizomenoides (Forti) Horecka & Komarek (=Anabaena aphanizomenoides Forti), these planktonic species were reclassified into Sphaerospermopsis Zapomelova et al. Our study's main objective was to characterize morphologically and molecularly cyanobacterial populations identified as Dolichospermum torques-reginae, observed in different aquatic ecosystems in South America. The 16S rRNA gene of two Dolichospermum torques-reginae strains (ITEP-024 and ITEP-026) was sequenced and phylogenetically analyzed for the first time. The morphological and phylogenetic analyses demonstrated the affiliation of the studied populations with the genus Sphaerospermopsis and, consequently, were denominated as Sphaerospermopsis torques-reginae. Furthermore, geographic distribution, ecology, and toxicity of the species are discussed. It was observed in different aquatic environments, natural and artificial, tropical and subtropical in Brazil, temperate in Argentina, and tropical in Colombia, suggesting a wide distribution in South America. It normally occurred in dense freshwater blooms, although it was also found in water with low salinity. Sphaerospermopsis torques-reginae toxic blooms have been reported in tropical water bodies in northeastern Brazil.

CNPq (PIBIC - MCN/FZBRS) [142749/2009-5, 308299/2009-4]

CNPq (PIBIC MCN/FZBRS)

FAPESP [2007/07075-5]

FAPESP

Ministry of Education Agency (CAPES)

Ministry of Education Agency (CAPES)

Identificador

PHYCOLOGIA, LAWRENCE, v. 51, n. 2, supl., Part 3, pp. 228-238, MAR, 2012

0031-8884

http://www.producao.usp.br/handle/BDPI/37809

10.2216/11-32.1

http://dx.doi.org/10.2216/11-32.1

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

INT PHYCOLOGICAL SOC

LAWRENCE

Relação

PHYCOLOGIA

Direitos

restrictedAccess

Copyright INT PHYCOLOGICAL SOC

Palavras-Chave #16S RRNA GENE #ANABAENA TORQUES-REGINAE #CYANOBACTERIA #DOLICHOSPERMUM #ECOLOGY #GEOGRAPHIC DISTRIBUTION #MORPHOLOGY #PHYLOGENY #TOXICITY #MAXIMUM-LIKELIHOOD #ANABAENA #DOLICHOSPERMUM #APHANIZOMENON #PLANT SCIENCES #MARINE & FRESHWATER BIOLOGY
Tipo

article

original article

publishedVersion