Chondrus crispus – A Present and Historical Model Organism for Red Seaweeds

Abstract: 

Chondrus crispus, or Irish moss, is a common edible red seaweed that can be found on rocky shores in the Northern Atlantic. The cell wall contains carrageenan and C. crispus is the original source of this commercially used thickener. Because of the ecological and economic importance of this red alga a relatively important research literature exists and one of the recent achievements in C. crispus research is the sequencing of its genome. In this chapter we review some of the literature with the aim to promote C. crispus as a model organism for florideophyte red seaweeds. We consider subjects like commercial and historical uses, ecology, genetics, population structure, mating systems, physiology, cell wall biology and genomics.

Author(s): 
Catherine Boyen
Thierry Tonon
Philippe Potin
Gurvan Michel
Catherine Leblanc
Stacy A. Krueger-Hadfield
Cécile Hervé
Elizabeth Ficko-Blean
James Craigie
M. Lynn Cornish
Jonas Collén
Keywords: 
Carrageenan
Cell wall
Chondrus crispus
Genome
Irish moss
Mating system
Population structure
Rhodophyta
Article Source: 
Advances in Botanical Research Volume 71, 2014, Pages 53-89
Category: 
Basic Biology
Seaweed composition