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Expanding the molecular and morphological diversity of Apusomonadida, a deep-branching group of gliding bacterivorous protists

Title
Expanding the molecular and morphological diversity of Apusomonadida, a deep-branching group of gliding bacterivorous protists
Authors
Torruella, GuifreGalindo, Luis JavierMoreira, DavidCiobanu, MariaHeiss, Aaron A.Yubuki, NaojiKim, EunsooLopez-Garcia, Purificacion
Ewha Authors
김은수
SCOPUS Author ID
김은수scopus
Issue Date
2023
Journal Title
JOURNAL OF EUKARYOTIC MICROBIOLOGY
ISSN
1066-5234JCR Link

1550-7408JCR Link
Citation
JOURNAL OF EUKARYOTIC MICROBIOLOGY vol. 70, no. 2
Keywords
AmastigomonasApusomonasApusozoadiversityevolutionflagellatephylogenytaxonomyThecamonas
Publisher
WILEY
Indexed
SCIE; SCOPUS WOS scopus
Document Type
Article
Abstract
Apusomonads are cosmopolitan bacterivorous biflagellate protists usually gliding on freshwater and marine sediment or wet soils. These nanoflagellates form a sister lineage to opisthokonts and may have retained ancestral features helpful to understanding the early evolution of this large supergroup. Although molecular environmental analyses indicate that apusomonads are genetically diverse, few species have been described. Here, we morphologically characterize 11 new apusomonad strains. Based on molecular phylogenetic analyses of the rRNA gene operon, we describe four new strains of the known species Multimonas media, Podomonas capensis, Apusomonas proboscidea, and Apusomonas australiensis, and rename Thecamonas oxoniensis as Mylnikovia oxoniensis n. gen., n. comb. Additionally, we describe four new genera and six new species: Catacumbia lutetiensis n. gen. n. sp., Cavaliersmithia chaoae n. gen. n. sp., Singekia montserratensis n. gen. n. sp., Singekia franciliensis n. gen. n. sp., Karpovia croatica n. gen. n. sp., and Chelonemonas dolani n. sp. Our comparative analysis suggests that apusomonad ancestor was a fusiform biflagellate with a dorsal pellicle, a plastic ventral surface, and a sleeve covering the anterior flagellum, that thrived in marine, possibly oxygen-poor, environments. It likely had a complex cell cycle with dormant and multiple fission stages, and sex. Our results extend known apusomonad diversity, allow updating their taxonomy, and provide elements to understand early eukaryotic evolution.
DOI
10.1111/jeu.12956
Appears in Collections:
자연과학대학 > 생명과학전공 > Journal papers
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