From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The heterolobosean pathogen Naegleria fowleri can behave as an amoeba (center) or as a flagellate (right).

An amoeboflagellate ( pl. amoeboflagellates) is any eukaryotic organism capable of behaving as an amoeba and as a flagellate at some point during their life cycle. Amoeboflagellates present both pseudopodia and at least one flagellum, often simultaneously. [1] [2]

Occurrence

The amoeboflagellate cell type has been acquired numerous independent times across the evolution of protists (i.e. primarily unicellular eukaryotes that are not plants, fungi or animals). [3] Some examples of protist phyla with amoeboflagellate body types are:

  • Percolozoa contains amoeboflagellates with lobose pseudopods, but are differentiated by their flat mitochondrial cristae, not tubular as in Amoebozoa. [7] [15] A popular example is the genus Naegleria, whose members can change shape between an amoeba and a flagellate. [1]
The choanoflagellate Salpingoeca rosetta can switch between a swimming ( flagellate) stage and a crawling ( amoeboid) stage when subjected to a confined space. [3]

The amoeboflagellate phenotype is present in numerous protists that have a crucial phylogenetic position near the origin of animals and fungi, within the vast clade known as Opisthokonta. It has been described in choanoflagellates such as Salpingoeca, filastereans such as Pigoraptor, and even some early-branching fungi such as Sanchytrium, [16] but it is absent in animals. [3] The two species of Pluriformea have a wide range of cell types, from cellular aggregations to amoeboflagellates. [17]

Notes

  1. ^ This class belongs to a paraphyletic phylum that is in disuse, known as Apusozoa. [12] Although not a phylum itself, it is listed here with other phyla due to comprising an independent clade of organisms.

References

  1. ^ a b Johan F De Jonckheere (6 August 2011). "Origin and evolution of the worldwide distributed pathogenic amoeboflagellate Naegleria fowleri". Infection, Genetics and Evolution. 11 (7): 1520–1528. doi: 10.1016/J.MEEGID.2011.07.023. ISSN  1567-1348. PMID  21843657. Wikidata  Q37917917.
  2. ^ a b Alexander P. Myl'nikov; Serguei A. Karpov (2004). "Review of diversity and taxonomy of cercomonads" (PDF). Protistology. 3 (4): 201–217. ISSN  1680-0826. Wikidata  Q124459772.
  3. ^ a b c Thibaut Brunet; Marvin Albert; William Roman; Maxwell C Coyle; Danielle C Spitzer; Nicole King (15 January 2021). "A flagellate-to-amoeboid switch in the closest living relatives of animals". eLife. 10. doi: 10.7554/ELIFE.61037. ISSN  2050-084X. PMC  7895527. PMID  33448265. Wikidata  Q105870433.
  4. ^ Sebastian Hess; Michael Melkonian (21 July 2014). "Ultrastructure of the Algivorous Amoeboflagellate Viridiraptor invadens (Glissomonadida, Cercozoa)". Protist. 165 (5): 605–635. doi: 10.1016/J.PROTIS.2014.07.004. ISSN  1434-4610. PMID  25150610. Wikidata  Q42464422.
  5. ^ Anna Maria Fiore-Donno; Tim Richter-Heitmann; Florine Degrune; et al. (11 June 2019). "Functional Traits and Spatio-Temporal Structure of a Major Group of Soil Protists (Rhizaria: Cercozoa) in a Temperate Grassland". Frontiers in Microbiology. 10: 1332. doi: 10.3389/FMICB.2019.01332. ISSN  1664-302X. PMC  6579879. PMID  31244819. Wikidata  Q64891960.
  6. ^ David Bass; Akinori Yabuki; Sébastien Santini; Sarah Romac; Cédric Berney (4 December 2012). "Reticulamoeba is a long-branched Granofilosean (Cercozoa) that is missing from sequence databases". PLOS One. 7 (12): e49090. Bibcode: 2012PLoSO...749090B. doi: 10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0049090. ISSN  1932-6203. PMC  3514243. PMID  23226495. Wikidata  Q34506390.
  7. ^ a b c Thomas Cavalier-Smith; Ema E.-Y. Chao; Brian Oates (May 2004). "Molecular phylogeny of Amoebozoa and the evolutionary significance of the unikont Phalansterium". European Journal of Protistology. 40 (1): 21–48. doi: 10.1016/J.EJOP.2003.10.001. ISSN  0932-4739. Wikidata  Q29399107.
  8. ^ Emmo Hamann; Harald Gruber-Vodicka; Manuel Kleiner; et al. (9 June 2016). "Environmental Breviatea harbour mutualistic Arcobacter epibionts". Nature. 534 (7606): 254–8. doi: 10.1038/NATURE18297. ISSN  1476-4687. PMC  4900452. PMID  27279223. Wikidata  Q28828264.
  9. ^ Jim Clark; Edward F. Haskins (2016). "Mycosphere Essays 3. Myxomycete spore and amoeboflagellate biology: a review". Mycosphere. 7 (2): 86–101. doi: 10.5943/MYCOSPHERE/7/2/1. ISSN  2077-7019. Wikidata  Q117487619.
  10. ^ Irina A. Milyutina; Vladimir V. Aleshin; Kirill A. Mikrjukov; OIga S. Kedrova; Nikolai B. Petrov (1 July 2001). "The unusually long small subunit ribosomal RNA gene found in amitochondriate amoeboflagellate Pelomyxa palustris: its rRNA predicted secondary structure and phylogenetic implication". Gene. 272 (1–2): 131–139. doi: 10.1016/S0378-1119(01)00556-X. ISSN  0378-1119. PMID  11470518. Wikidata  Q48352141.
  11. ^ Koryu Kin; Pauline Schaap (27 March 2021). "Evolution of Multicellular Complexity in The Dictyostelid Social Amoebas". Genes. 12 (4): 487. doi: 10.3390/GENES12040487. ISSN  2073-4425. PMC  8067170. PMID  33801615. Wikidata  Q124470705.
  12. ^ Jordi Paps; Luis A Medina-Chacón; Wyth Marshall; Hiroshi Suga; Iñaki Ruiz-Trillo (18 October 2012). "Molecular phylogeny of unikonts: new insights into the position of apusomonads and ancyromonads and the internal relationships of opisthokonts". Protist. 164 (1): 2–12. doi: 10.1016/J.PROTIS.2012.09.002. ISSN  1434-4610. PMC  4342546. PMID  23083534. Wikidata  Q34307204.
  13. ^ Marianne A Minge; Jeffrey D Silberman; Russell J S Orr; Thomas Cavalier-Smith; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Fabien Burki; Asmund Skjaeveland; Kjetill S Jakobsen (22 February 2009). "Evolutionary position of breviate amoebae and the primary eukaryote divergence". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 276 (1657): 597–604. doi: 10.1098/RSPB.2008.1358. ISSN  0962-8452. PMC  2660946. PMID  19004754. Wikidata  Q24652846.
  14. ^ Thomas Cavalier-Smith; Ema E Chao; Elizabeth A Snell; Cédric Berney; Anna Maria Fiore-Donno; Rhodri Lewis (23 August 2014). "Multigene eukaryote phylogeny reveals the likely protozoan ancestors of opisthokonts (animals, fungi, choanozoans) and Amoebozoa". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 81: 71–85. doi: 10.1016/J.YMPEV.2014.08.012. ISSN  1055-7903. PMID  25152275. Wikidata  Q34434820.
  15. ^ C A Broers; C K Stumm; G D Vogels; G Brugerolle (1 June 1990). "Psalteriomonas lanterna gen. nov., sp. nov., a free-living amoeboflagellate isolated from freshwater anaerobic sediments". European Journal of Protistology. 25 (4): 369–380. doi: 10.1016/S0932-4739(11)80130-6. ISSN  0932-4739. PMID  23196051. Wikidata  Q30579184.
  16. ^ Luis Javier Galindo; Purificación López-García; Guifré Torruella; Sergey Karpov; David Moreira (17 August 2021). "Phylogenomics of a new fungal phylum reveals multiple waves of reductive evolution across Holomycota". Nature Communications. 12 (1). doi: 10.1038/S41467-021-25308-W. ISSN  2041-1723. PMC  8371127. PMID  34404788. Wikidata  Q113186376.
  17. ^ Elisabeth Hehenberger; Denis Tikhonenkov; Martin Kolisko; Javier del Campo; Anton S Esaulov; Alexander P Mylnikov; Patrick J Keeling (15 June 2017). "Novel Predators Reshape Holozoan Phylogeny and Reveal the Presence of a Two-Component Signaling System in the Ancestor of Animals". Current Biology. 27 (13): 2043-2050.e6. doi: 10.1016/J.CUB.2017.06.006. ISSN  0960-9822. PMID  28648822. Wikidata  Q40146126.
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The heterolobosean pathogen Naegleria fowleri can behave as an amoeba (center) or as a flagellate (right).

An amoeboflagellate ( pl. amoeboflagellates) is any eukaryotic organism capable of behaving as an amoeba and as a flagellate at some point during their life cycle. Amoeboflagellates present both pseudopodia and at least one flagellum, often simultaneously. [1] [2]

Occurrence

The amoeboflagellate cell type has been acquired numerous independent times across the evolution of protists (i.e. primarily unicellular eukaryotes that are not plants, fungi or animals). [3] Some examples of protist phyla with amoeboflagellate body types are:

  • Percolozoa contains amoeboflagellates with lobose pseudopods, but are differentiated by their flat mitochondrial cristae, not tubular as in Amoebozoa. [7] [15] A popular example is the genus Naegleria, whose members can change shape between an amoeba and a flagellate. [1]
The choanoflagellate Salpingoeca rosetta can switch between a swimming ( flagellate) stage and a crawling ( amoeboid) stage when subjected to a confined space. [3]

The amoeboflagellate phenotype is present in numerous protists that have a crucial phylogenetic position near the origin of animals and fungi, within the vast clade known as Opisthokonta. It has been described in choanoflagellates such as Salpingoeca, filastereans such as Pigoraptor, and even some early-branching fungi such as Sanchytrium, [16] but it is absent in animals. [3] The two species of Pluriformea have a wide range of cell types, from cellular aggregations to amoeboflagellates. [17]

Notes

  1. ^ This class belongs to a paraphyletic phylum that is in disuse, known as Apusozoa. [12] Although not a phylum itself, it is listed here with other phyla due to comprising an independent clade of organisms.

References

  1. ^ a b Johan F De Jonckheere (6 August 2011). "Origin and evolution of the worldwide distributed pathogenic amoeboflagellate Naegleria fowleri". Infection, Genetics and Evolution. 11 (7): 1520–1528. doi: 10.1016/J.MEEGID.2011.07.023. ISSN  1567-1348. PMID  21843657. Wikidata  Q37917917.
  2. ^ a b Alexander P. Myl'nikov; Serguei A. Karpov (2004). "Review of diversity and taxonomy of cercomonads" (PDF). Protistology. 3 (4): 201–217. ISSN  1680-0826. Wikidata  Q124459772.
  3. ^ a b c Thibaut Brunet; Marvin Albert; William Roman; Maxwell C Coyle; Danielle C Spitzer; Nicole King (15 January 2021). "A flagellate-to-amoeboid switch in the closest living relatives of animals". eLife. 10. doi: 10.7554/ELIFE.61037. ISSN  2050-084X. PMC  7895527. PMID  33448265. Wikidata  Q105870433.
  4. ^ Sebastian Hess; Michael Melkonian (21 July 2014). "Ultrastructure of the Algivorous Amoeboflagellate Viridiraptor invadens (Glissomonadida, Cercozoa)". Protist. 165 (5): 605–635. doi: 10.1016/J.PROTIS.2014.07.004. ISSN  1434-4610. PMID  25150610. Wikidata  Q42464422.
  5. ^ Anna Maria Fiore-Donno; Tim Richter-Heitmann; Florine Degrune; et al. (11 June 2019). "Functional Traits and Spatio-Temporal Structure of a Major Group of Soil Protists (Rhizaria: Cercozoa) in a Temperate Grassland". Frontiers in Microbiology. 10: 1332. doi: 10.3389/FMICB.2019.01332. ISSN  1664-302X. PMC  6579879. PMID  31244819. Wikidata  Q64891960.
  6. ^ David Bass; Akinori Yabuki; Sébastien Santini; Sarah Romac; Cédric Berney (4 December 2012). "Reticulamoeba is a long-branched Granofilosean (Cercozoa) that is missing from sequence databases". PLOS One. 7 (12): e49090. Bibcode: 2012PLoSO...749090B. doi: 10.1371/JOURNAL.PONE.0049090. ISSN  1932-6203. PMC  3514243. PMID  23226495. Wikidata  Q34506390.
  7. ^ a b c Thomas Cavalier-Smith; Ema E.-Y. Chao; Brian Oates (May 2004). "Molecular phylogeny of Amoebozoa and the evolutionary significance of the unikont Phalansterium". European Journal of Protistology. 40 (1): 21–48. doi: 10.1016/J.EJOP.2003.10.001. ISSN  0932-4739. Wikidata  Q29399107.
  8. ^ Emmo Hamann; Harald Gruber-Vodicka; Manuel Kleiner; et al. (9 June 2016). "Environmental Breviatea harbour mutualistic Arcobacter epibionts". Nature. 534 (7606): 254–8. doi: 10.1038/NATURE18297. ISSN  1476-4687. PMC  4900452. PMID  27279223. Wikidata  Q28828264.
  9. ^ Jim Clark; Edward F. Haskins (2016). "Mycosphere Essays 3. Myxomycete spore and amoeboflagellate biology: a review". Mycosphere. 7 (2): 86–101. doi: 10.5943/MYCOSPHERE/7/2/1. ISSN  2077-7019. Wikidata  Q117487619.
  10. ^ Irina A. Milyutina; Vladimir V. Aleshin; Kirill A. Mikrjukov; OIga S. Kedrova; Nikolai B. Petrov (1 July 2001). "The unusually long small subunit ribosomal RNA gene found in amitochondriate amoeboflagellate Pelomyxa palustris: its rRNA predicted secondary structure and phylogenetic implication". Gene. 272 (1–2): 131–139. doi: 10.1016/S0378-1119(01)00556-X. ISSN  0378-1119. PMID  11470518. Wikidata  Q48352141.
  11. ^ Koryu Kin; Pauline Schaap (27 March 2021). "Evolution of Multicellular Complexity in The Dictyostelid Social Amoebas". Genes. 12 (4): 487. doi: 10.3390/GENES12040487. ISSN  2073-4425. PMC  8067170. PMID  33801615. Wikidata  Q124470705.
  12. ^ Jordi Paps; Luis A Medina-Chacón; Wyth Marshall; Hiroshi Suga; Iñaki Ruiz-Trillo (18 October 2012). "Molecular phylogeny of unikonts: new insights into the position of apusomonads and ancyromonads and the internal relationships of opisthokonts". Protist. 164 (1): 2–12. doi: 10.1016/J.PROTIS.2012.09.002. ISSN  1434-4610. PMC  4342546. PMID  23083534. Wikidata  Q34307204.
  13. ^ Marianne A Minge; Jeffrey D Silberman; Russell J S Orr; Thomas Cavalier-Smith; Kamran Shalchian-Tabrizi; Fabien Burki; Asmund Skjaeveland; Kjetill S Jakobsen (22 February 2009). "Evolutionary position of breviate amoebae and the primary eukaryote divergence". Proceedings of the Royal Society B. 276 (1657): 597–604. doi: 10.1098/RSPB.2008.1358. ISSN  0962-8452. PMC  2660946. PMID  19004754. Wikidata  Q24652846.
  14. ^ Thomas Cavalier-Smith; Ema E Chao; Elizabeth A Snell; Cédric Berney; Anna Maria Fiore-Donno; Rhodri Lewis (23 August 2014). "Multigene eukaryote phylogeny reveals the likely protozoan ancestors of opisthokonts (animals, fungi, choanozoans) and Amoebozoa". Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 81: 71–85. doi: 10.1016/J.YMPEV.2014.08.012. ISSN  1055-7903. PMID  25152275. Wikidata  Q34434820.
  15. ^ C A Broers; C K Stumm; G D Vogels; G Brugerolle (1 June 1990). "Psalteriomonas lanterna gen. nov., sp. nov., a free-living amoeboflagellate isolated from freshwater anaerobic sediments". European Journal of Protistology. 25 (4): 369–380. doi: 10.1016/S0932-4739(11)80130-6. ISSN  0932-4739. PMID  23196051. Wikidata  Q30579184.
  16. ^ Luis Javier Galindo; Purificación López-García; Guifré Torruella; Sergey Karpov; David Moreira (17 August 2021). "Phylogenomics of a new fungal phylum reveals multiple waves of reductive evolution across Holomycota". Nature Communications. 12 (1). doi: 10.1038/S41467-021-25308-W. ISSN  2041-1723. PMC  8371127. PMID  34404788. Wikidata  Q113186376.
  17. ^ Elisabeth Hehenberger; Denis Tikhonenkov; Martin Kolisko; Javier del Campo; Anton S Esaulov; Alexander P Mylnikov; Patrick J Keeling (15 June 2017). "Novel Predators Reshape Holozoan Phylogeny and Reveal the Presence of a Two-Component Signaling System in the Ancestor of Animals". Current Biology. 27 (13): 2043-2050.e6. doi: 10.1016/J.CUB.2017.06.006. ISSN  0960-9822. PMID  28648822. Wikidata  Q40146126.

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