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Toxicity

provided by Harmful Phytoplankton Project
Amphidinium carterae is a CFP (ciguatera fish poisoning) producer.
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University of Liverpool
bibliographic citation
Guide to UK Coastal Planktonic Ciliates © 2001 DJS Montagnes, University of Liverpool http://www.liv.ac.uk/ciliate/
author
David J.S. Montagnes

Diagnostic Description

provided by Harmful Phytoplankton Project
The body is oval in ventral view and is dorso-ventrally flattened. The cell contains one large, lobed chloroplast with a central pyrenoid structure. The chloroplast is located around the cell periphery and can obscure other cell organelles. The nucleus is large and ovoid and located in the posterior part of the cell. The cingulum surrounds the epitheca, located lower on the ventral than the dorsal side. In ventral view it forms a v-shape. The epitheca is asymmetric and directed to the left.

References

  • Dodge JD (1982) Marine dinoflagellates of the British Isles. Her Majesty's Stationary office. pp 303.
  • Schiller L (1933) dinoflagellatae. Vol. 10, III, pt 2. In: Rabenhorst's Kryptogamenflora. Leipzig.
  • Campbell PH 1973. Studies on brackish water phytoplankton. University of North Carolina. Sea Grant Publication UNC SG-73-07, pp 406.

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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
University of Liverpool
bibliographic citation
Guide to UK Coastal Planktonic Ciliates © 2001 DJS Montagnes, University of Liverpool http://www.liv.ac.uk/ciliate/
author
David J.S. Montagnes

Comprehensive Description

provided by Harmful Phytoplankton Project
Amphidinium carterae has a dorso-ventrally compressed body with a very small epitheca. The epitheca is asymmetric and directed to the left. Girdle is v-shaped ventrally and runs higher on the dorsal side of the cell.
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
University of Liverpool
bibliographic citation
Guide to UK Coastal Planktonic Ciliates © 2001 DJS Montagnes, University of Liverpool http://www.liv.ac.uk/ciliate/
author
David J.S. Montagnes

Distribution

provided by Harmful Phytoplankton Project
Amphidinium carterae is found all around the British Isles. It is cosmopolitan, found in both tropical and temperate waters, in estuarine as well as coastal areas. It is predominantly benthic.
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cc-by-nc-sa-3.0
copyright
University of Liverpool
bibliographic citation
Guide to UK Coastal Planktonic Ciliates © 2001 DJS Montagnes, University of Liverpool http://www.liv.ac.uk/ciliate/
author
David J.S. Montagnes

Amphidinium

provided by wikipedia EN

Amphidinium is a genus of dinoflagellates. The type for the genus is Amphidinium operculatum Claparède & Lachmann. The genus includes the species Amphidinium carterae which is used as a model organism.[1]

As dinoflagellates, Amphidinium spp. have chloroplasts. The Amphidinium chloroplast genome is unusual in not having a single contiguous circular genome.[2][3] Instead, chloroplast genes encoded in chloroplast DNA are found on numerous 2-3 kbp minicircles,[2][3] analogous to plasmids. Most minicircles have only a few protein-coding genes; many have just a single gene.[2][3] There are reports of minicircles that do not have known transcripts, like in the Amphidinium carterae chloroplast genome,[3] although these were not found in the Symbiodinium sp. Clade C3 chloroplast genome.[2] Minicircle-derived transcripts can be processed in ways not typical of eukaryotes, including the addition of a 3' poly(U) tail,[3] as opposed to the typical poly(A) tail derived from polyadenylation of eukaryotic transcripts. Minicircle-derived antisense transcripts are also produced, but without 3' poly(U) tails.[3]

See also

References

  1. ^ Nash, E.; Barbrook, A.; Edwards-Stuart, R.; Bernhardt, K.; Howe, C.; Nisbet, R. (2007). "Organization of the mitochondrial genome in the dinoflagellate Amphidinium carterae". Molecular Biology and Evolution. 24 (7): 1528–1536. doi:10.1093/molbev/msm074. PMID 17440175.
  2. ^ a b c d Barbrook, Adrian C.; Voolstra, Christian R.; Howe, Christopher J. (2014). "The Chloroplast Genome of a Symbiodinium sp. Clade C3 Isolate". Protist. 165 (1): 1–13. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2013.09.006. PMID 24316380.
  3. ^ a b c d e f Dorrell, Richard G.; Nisbet, R. Ellen R.; Barbrook, Adrian C.; Rowden, Stephen J.L.; Howe, Christopher J. (2019). "Integrated Genomic and Transcriptomic Analysis of the Peridinin Dinoflagellate Amphidinium carterae Plastid". Protist. 170 (4): 358–373. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2019.06.001. PMID 31415953. S2CID 198240765.
  4. ^ Y. Doi et al., "Luteophanol A, a New Polyhydroxyl Compound from Symbiotic Marine Dinoflagellate Amphidinium sp.", Journal of Organic Chemistry (1997) (abstract)
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Amphidinium: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Amphidinium is a genus of dinoflagellates. The type for the genus is Amphidinium operculatum Claparède & Lachmann. The genus includes the species Amphidinium carterae which is used as a model organism.

As dinoflagellates, Amphidinium spp. have chloroplasts. The Amphidinium chloroplast genome is unusual in not having a single contiguous circular genome. Instead, chloroplast genes encoded in chloroplast DNA are found on numerous 2-3 kbp minicircles, analogous to plasmids. Most minicircles have only a few protein-coding genes; many have just a single gene. There are reports of minicircles that do not have known transcripts, like in the Amphidinium carterae chloroplast genome, although these were not found in the Symbiodinium sp. Clade C3 chloroplast genome. Minicircle-derived transcripts can be processed in ways not typical of eukaryotes, including the addition of a 3' poly(U) tail, as opposed to the typical poly(A) tail derived from polyadenylation of eukaryotic transcripts. Minicircle-derived antisense transcripts are also produced, but without 3' poly(U) tails.

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wikipedia EN

Classification

provided by World Register of Marine Species
This genus was originally placed under the family Gymnodiniidae according to the classification proposed by Hayward & Ryland (1990).
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