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Apusomonadidae

The apusomonads (family Apusomonadidae) are a group of protozoan zooflagellates that glide on surfaces, and mostly consume prokaryotes. They are of particular evolutionary interest because they appear to be the sister group to the Opisthokonts, the clade that includes both animals and fungi. Together with the Breviatea, these form the Obazoa clade.[3][4][5]

Apusomonadidae
Podomonas kaiyoae SEM image. AF: anterior flagellum. PF: posterior flagellum. T: tusk. Brackets: acronemes. Arrows and arrowheads: pseudopodium. Scale bar = 5 μm.
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Amorphea
Clade: Obazoa
Class: Thecomonadea
Cavalier-Smith, 1993 emend. 2013[2]
Order: Apusomonadida
Karpov & Mylnikov, 1989[1]
Family: Apusomonadidae
Karpov & Mylnikov, 1989[1]
Genera

See text

Diversity
28 species

Characteristics edit

Apusomonads are small gliding heterotrophic biflagellates (i.e. with two flagella) that possess a proboscis, formed partly or entirely by the anterior flagellum surrounded by a membranous sleeve. There is a pellicle under the dorsal cell membrane that extends into the proboscis sleeve and into a skirt that covers the sides of the cell. Apusomonads present two different cell plans:[6]

  • Derived cell plan, represented by Apusomonas, with a round cell body and a mastigophore, a projection of the cell containing both basal bodies at its end.[6]
  • "Amastigomonas-like" cell plan, with an oval or oblong cell that generally forms pseudopodia from the ventral surface, with no mastigophore, and the proboscis comprising solely the flagellum and the sleeve. These characteristics are considered 'primitive' or 'ancestral' in comparison with Apusomonas. Organisms with this body plan, although historically assigned to the same genus Amastigomonas, are a paraphyletic group from which Apusomonas has evolved.[6][7]

Evolution edit

External relationships edit

The apusomonads are the sister group to Opisthokonta, the lineage that includes animals, fungi and an array of related protists. Because of this, apusomonads occupy an important phylogenetic position to understand eukaryotic evolution. They retain ancestral characteristics, such as the biflagellate body plan, which in opisthokonts evolves into a uniflagellate plan.[7]

Apusomonads are vital to understanding multicellularity. Genes involved in multicellularity have been found in the apusomonad Thecamonas,[8] such as adhesion proteins, calcium-signaling genes and types of sodium channels characteristic of animals.[6] The genome of the strain "Amastigomonas sp." presents the integrin-mediated adhesion machinery, the primary cell-matrix adhesion mechanism seen in Metazoa (animals).[9]

Internal relationships edit

Apusomonads are a poorly and narrowly studied group.[6] Currently, the diversity of described apusomonads consists of the round Apusomonas and a wide array of "Amastigomonas-type" organisms that have been reclassified into the genera Thecamonas, Manchomonas, Podomonas, Multimonas, Chelonemonas and, most recently, Catacumbia, Cavaliersmithia, Karpovia, Mylnikovia and Singekia. The relationships between these genera are depicted by the cladogram below.[7]

Apusomonadida
Apusomonadinae
Thecamonadinae

Karpovia

Podomonas

Multimonas

Mylnikovia

Cavaliersmithia

Catacumbia

"Amastigomonas-like" organisms

Taxonomy edit

History edit

Apusomonads were first described in 1989 as one family Apusomonadidae inside the monotypic order Apusomonadida, as a group of flagellates containing the genera Apusomonas and Amastigomonas.[1] Later, British protozoologist Thomas Cavalier-Smith classified them within the monotypic class Thecomonadea as part of the paraphyletic phylum Apusozoa.[2] Modern cladistic approaches to eukaryotic classification refer to apusomonads by their order-level name alone.[7][10]

Classification edit

There are 10 recognized genera, as well as the "Amastigomonas-like" archetype that includes primitive forms not yet transferred to new genera.[7]

  • Amastigomonas de Saedeleer 1931
    • A. caudata Mylnikov 1989 [Amastigomonas borokensis Hamar 1979]
    • A. debruynei de Saedeleer 1931
    • A. marisrubri Mylnikov & Mylnikov 2012
  • Catacumbia Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022[7]
    • C. lutetiensis Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
  • Cavaliersmithia Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
    • C. chaoae Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
  • Multimonas Cavalier-Smith 2010
    • M. koreensis Heiss, Lee, Ishida & Simpson, 2015
    • M. marina (Mylnikov 1989) Cavalier-Smith 2010 [Cercomonas marina Mylnikov 1989; Amastigomonas marina (Mylnikov 1989) Mylnikov 1999]
    • M. media Cavalier-Smith 2010
  • Mylnikovia Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
    • M. oxoniensis (Cavalier-Smith 2010) Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022 [Thecamonas oxoniensis Cavalier-Smith 2010]
  • Podomonas Cavalier-Smith 2010
    • P. capensis Cavalier-Smith 2010
    • P. gigantea (Mylnikov 1999) [Amastigomonas gigantea Mylnikov 1999]
    • P. griebenis (Mylnikov 1999) [Amastigomonas griebenis Mylnikov 1999]
    • P. kaiyoae Yabuki in Yabuki, Tame & Mizuno 2022[11]
    • P. klosteris (Arndt & Mylnikov 1999) Cavalier-Smith 2010 [Amastigomonas klosteris Arndt & Mylnikov 1999]
    • P. magna Cavalier-Smith 2010
  • Apusomonadinae Cavalier-Smith 2010[3]
    • Apusomonas Alexeieff 1924 [Rostromonas Karpoff & Zhukov 1980]
      • A. australiensis Ekelund & Patterson 1997
      • A. proboscidea Alexeieff 1924 [Rostromonas applanata Karpoff & Zhukov 1980]
    • Manchomonas Cavalier-Smith 2010
      • M. bermudensis (Molina & Nerad 1991) Cavalier-Smith 2010 [Amastigomonas bermudensis Molina & Nerad 1991]
  • Thecamonadinae Larsen & Patterson 1990 [Thecamonas/Chelomonas clade]
    • Chelonemonas Heiss, Lee, Ishida & Simpson, 2015
      • C. dolani Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
      • C. geobuk Heiss, Lee, Ishida & Simpson, 2015
      • C. masanensis Heiss, Lee, Ishida & Simpson, 2015
    • Karpovia Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
      • K. croatica Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
    • Singekia Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
      • S. franciliensis Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
      • S. montserratensis Torruella, Galindo et al. 2022
    • Thecamonas Larsen & Patterson 1990
      • T. filosa Larsen & Patterson 1990 [Amastigomonas filosa (Larsen & Patterson 1990) Molina & Nerad 1991]
      • T. muscula (Mylnikov 1999) Cavalier-Smith 2010 [Amastigomonas muscula Mylnikov 1999]
      • T. mutabilis (Griessmann 1913) Larsen & Patterson 1990 [Rhynchomonas mutabilis Griessmann 1913; Amastigomonas mutabilis (Griessmann 1913) Patterson & Zölffel 1993]
      • T. trahens Larsen & Patterson 1990 [Amastigomonas trahens (Larsen & Patterson 1990) Molina & Nerad 1991]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Karpov SA, Mylnikov AP (1989). "БИОЛОГИЯ И УЛЬТРАСТРУКТУРА БЕСЦВЕТНЫХ ЖГУТИКОНОСЦЕВ APUSOMONADIDA ORD.N" [Biology and ultrastructure of colourless flagellates Apusomonadida ord. n.] (PDF). Zoologischkeiĭ Zhurnal (in Russian). LXVIII (8): 5–17.
  2. ^ a b Cavalier-Smith, Thomas (May 2013). "Early evolution of eukaryote feeding modes, cell structural diversity, and classification of the protozoan phyla Loukozoa, Sulcozoa, and Choanozoa". European Journal of Protistology. 49 (2): 115–178 Document online. doi:10.1016/j.ejop.2012.06.001. ISSN 0932-4739. PMID 23085100.
  3. ^ a b Cavalier-Smith, Thomas; Chao, Ema E. (October 2010). "Phylogeny and evolution of Apusomonadida (Protozoa: Apusozoa): new genera and species". Protist. 161 (4): 549–576. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2010.04.002. PMID 20537943.
  4. ^ Brown, Matthew W.; Sharpe, Susan C.; Silberman, Jeffrey D.; Heiss, Aaron A.; Lang, B. Franz; Simpson, Alastair G. B.; Roger, Andrew J. (2013-10-22). "Phylogenomics demonstrates that breviate flagellates are related to opisthokonts and apusomonads". Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B: Biological Sciences. 280 (1769): 20131755. doi:10.1098/rspb.2013.1755. ISSN 0962-8452. PMC 3768317. PMID 23986111.
  5. ^ Eme, Laura; Sharpe, Susan C.; Brown, Matthew W.; Roger, Andrew J. (2014-08-01). "On the Age of Eukaryotes: Evaluating Evidence from Fossils and Molecular Clocks". Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology. 6 (8): a016139. doi:10.1101/cshperspect.a016139. ISSN 1943-0264. PMC 4107988. PMID 25085908.
  6. ^ a b c d e Heiss AA, Lee WJ, Ishida KI, Simpson AG (2015). "Cultivation and Characterisation of New Species of Apusomonads (the Sister Group to Opisthokonts), Including Close Relatives of Thecamonas (Chelonemonas n. gen.)". Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology. 62 (5): 637–649. doi:10.1111/jeu.12220. PMID 25912654.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Torruella G, Galindo LJ, Moreira D, Ciobanu M, Heiss AA, Yubuki N, et al. (November 2022). "Expanding the molecular and morphological diversity of Apusomonadida, a deep-branching group of gliding bacterivorous protists". Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology. 70 (2): e12956. doi:10.1111/jeu.12956. hdl:2117/404026.
  8. ^ Sebe-Pedros A, Roger AJ, Lang FB, King N, Ruiz-Trillo I (2010). "Ancient origin of the integrin-mediated adhesion and signaling machinery". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 107 (22): 10142–10147. doi:10.1073/pnas.1002257107. PMC 2890464.
  9. ^ Sebé-Pedrós A, Ruiz-Trillo I (2010). "Integrin-mediated adhesion complex". Communicative & Integrative Biology. 3 (5): 475–477. doi:10.4161/cib.3.5.12603. PMC 2974085.
  10. ^ Adl SM, Bass D, Lane CE, Lukeš J, Schoch CL, Smirnov A, Agatha S, Berney C, Brown MW, Burki F, Cárdenas P, Čepička I, Chistyakova L, del Campo J, Dunthorn M, Edvardsen B, Eglit Y, Guillou L, Hampl V, Heiss AA, Hoppenrath M, James TY, Karnkowska A, Karpov S, Kim E, Kolisko M, Kudryavtsev A, Lahr DJG, Lara E, Le Gall L, Lynn DH, Mann DG, Massana R, Mitchell EAD, Morrow C, Park JS, Pawlowski JW, Powell MJ, Richter DJ, Rueckert S, Shadwick L, Shimano S, Spiegel FW, Torruella G, Youssef N, Zlatogursky V, Zhang Q (2019). "Revisions to the Classification, Nomenclature, and Diversity of Eukaryotes". Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology. 66 (1): 4–119. doi:10.1111/jeu.12691. PMC 6492006. PMID 30257078.
  11. ^ Yabuki A, Tame A, Mizuno K (2022). "Podomonas kaiyoae n. sp., a novel apusomonad growing axenically". Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology. 00: e12946. doi:10.1111/jeu.12946.

External links edit

apusomonadidae, apusomonads, family, group, protozoan, zooflagellates, that, glide, surfaces, mostly, consume, prokaryotes, they, particular, evolutionary, interest, because, they, appear, sister, group, opisthokonts, clade, that, includes, both, animals, fung. The apusomonads family Apusomonadidae are a group of protozoan zooflagellates that glide on surfaces and mostly consume prokaryotes They are of particular evolutionary interest because they appear to be the sister group to the Opisthokonts the clade that includes both animals and fungi Together with the Breviatea these form the Obazoa clade 3 4 5 ApusomonadidaePodomonas kaiyoae SEM image AF anterior flagellum PF posterior flagellum T tusk Brackets acronemes Arrows and arrowheads pseudopodium Scale bar 5 mm Scientific classificationDomain EukaryotaClade AmorpheaClade ObazoaClass ThecomonadeaCavalier Smith 1993 emend 2013 2 Order ApusomonadidaKarpov amp Mylnikov 1989 1 Family ApusomonadidaeKarpov amp Mylnikov 1989 1 GeneraSee textDiversity28 species Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Evolution 2 1 External relationships 2 2 Internal relationships 3 Taxonomy 3 1 History 3 2 Classification 4 References 5 External linksCharacteristics editApusomonads are small gliding heterotrophic biflagellates i e with two flagella that possess a proboscis formed partly or entirely by the anterior flagellum surrounded by a membranous sleeve There is a pellicle under the dorsal cell membrane that extends into the proboscis sleeve and into a skirt that covers the sides of the cell Apusomonads present two different cell plans 6 Derived cell plan represented by Apusomonas with a round cell body and a mastigophore a projection of the cell containing both basal bodies at its end 6 Amastigomonas like cell plan with an oval or oblong cell that generally forms pseudopodia from the ventral surface with no mastigophore and the proboscis comprising solely the flagellum and the sleeve These characteristics are considered primitive or ancestral in comparison with Apusomonas Organisms with this body plan although historically assigned to the same genus Amastigomonas are a paraphyletic group from which Apusomonas has evolved 6 7 Evolution editExternal relationships edit The apusomonads are the sister group to Opisthokonta the lineage that includes animals fungi and an array of related protists Because of this apusomonads occupy an important phylogenetic position to understand eukaryotic evolution They retain ancestral characteristics such as the biflagellate body plan which in opisthokonts evolves into a uniflagellate plan 7 Apusomonads are vital to understanding multicellularity Genes involved in multicellularity have been found in the apusomonad Thecamonas 8 such as adhesion proteins calcium signaling genes and types of sodium channels characteristic of animals 6 The genome of the strain Amastigomonas sp presents the integrin mediated adhesion machinery the primary cell matrix adhesion mechanism seen in Metazoa animals 9 Amorphea Amoebozoa nbsp Obazoa BreviateaApusomonadida nbsp Opisthokonta Holozoa Ichthyosporea nbsp Pluriformea nbsp TunicaraptorFilozoa Filasterea nbsp Choanozoa Choanoflagellata nbsp Metazoa nbsp Holomycota Fungi nbsp Nucleariae nbsp Internal relationships edit Apusomonads are a poorly and narrowly studied group 6 Currently the diversity of described apusomonads consists of the round Apusomonas and a wide array of Amastigomonas type organisms that have been reclassified into the genera Thecamonas Manchomonas Podomonas Multimonas Chelonemonas and most recently Catacumbia Cavaliersmithia Karpovia Mylnikovia and Singekia The relationships between these genera are depicted by the cladogram below 7 Apusomonadida Apusomonadinae ApusomonasManchomonasThecamonadinae KarpoviaSingekiaChelonemonasThecamonasPodomonasMultimonasMylnikoviaCavaliersmithiaCatacumbia Amastigomonas like organismsTaxonomy editHistory edit Apusomonads were first described in 1989 as one family Apusomonadidae inside the monotypic order Apusomonadida as a group of flagellates containing the genera Apusomonas and Amastigomonas 1 Later British protozoologist Thomas Cavalier Smith classified them within the monotypic class Thecomonadea as part of the paraphyletic phylum Apusozoa 2 Modern cladistic approaches to eukaryotic classification refer to apusomonads by their order level name alone 7 10 Classification edit There are 10 recognized genera as well as the Amastigomonas like archetype that includes primitive forms not yet transferred to new genera 7 Amastigomonas de Saedeleer 1931 A caudata Mylnikov 1989 Amastigomonas borokensis Hamar 1979 A debruynei de Saedeleer 1931 A marisrubri Mylnikov amp Mylnikov 2012 Catacumbia Torruella Galindo et al 2022 7 C lutetiensis Torruella Galindo et al 2022 Cavaliersmithia Torruella Galindo et al 2022 C chaoae Torruella Galindo et al 2022 Multimonas Cavalier Smith 2010 M koreensis Heiss Lee Ishida amp Simpson 2015 M marina Mylnikov 1989 Cavalier Smith 2010 Cercomonas marina Mylnikov 1989 Amastigomonas marina Mylnikov 1989 Mylnikov 1999 M media Cavalier Smith 2010 Mylnikovia Torruella Galindo et al 2022 M oxoniensis Cavalier Smith 2010 Torruella Galindo et al 2022 Thecamonas oxoniensis Cavalier Smith 2010 Podomonas Cavalier Smith 2010 P capensis Cavalier Smith 2010 P gigantea Mylnikov 1999 Amastigomonas gigantea Mylnikov 1999 P griebenis Mylnikov 1999 Amastigomonas griebenis Mylnikov 1999 P kaiyoae Yabuki in Yabuki Tame amp Mizuno 2022 11 P klosteris Arndt amp Mylnikov 1999 Cavalier Smith 2010 Amastigomonas klosteris Arndt amp Mylnikov 1999 P magna Cavalier Smith 2010 Apusomonadinae Cavalier Smith 2010 3 Apusomonas Alexeieff 1924 Rostromonas Karpoff amp Zhukov 1980 A australiensis Ekelund amp Patterson 1997 A proboscidea Alexeieff 1924 Rostromonas applanata Karpoff amp Zhukov 1980 Manchomonas Cavalier Smith 2010 M bermudensis Molina amp Nerad 1991 Cavalier Smith 2010 Amastigomonas bermudensis Molina amp Nerad 1991 Thecamonadinae Larsen amp Patterson 1990 Thecamonas Chelomonas clade Chelonemonas Heiss Lee Ishida amp Simpson 2015 C dolani Torruella Galindo et al 2022 C geobuk Heiss Lee Ishida amp Simpson 2015 C masanensis Heiss Lee Ishida amp Simpson 2015 Karpovia Torruella Galindo et al 2022 K croatica Torruella Galindo et al 2022 Singekia Torruella Galindo et al 2022 S franciliensis Torruella Galindo et al 2022 S montserratensis Torruella Galindo et al 2022 Thecamonas Larsen amp Patterson 1990 T filosa Larsen amp Patterson 1990 Amastigomonas filosa Larsen amp Patterson 1990 Molina amp Nerad 1991 T muscula Mylnikov 1999 Cavalier Smith 2010 Amastigomonas muscula Mylnikov 1999 T mutabilis Griessmann 1913 Larsen amp Patterson 1990 Rhynchomonas mutabilis Griessmann 1913 Amastigomonas mutabilis Griessmann 1913 Patterson amp Zolffel 1993 T trahens Larsen amp Patterson 1990 Amastigomonas trahens Larsen amp Patterson 1990 Molina amp Nerad 1991 References edit a b c Karpov SA Mylnikov AP 1989 BIOLOGIYa I ULTRASTRUKTURA BESCVETNYH ZhGUTIKONOSCEV APUSOMONADIDA ORD N Biology and ultrastructure of colourless flagellates Apusomonadida ord n PDF Zoologischkeiĭ Zhurnal in Russian LXVIII 8 5 17 a b Cavalier Smith Thomas May 2013 Early evolution of eukaryote feeding modes cell structural diversity and classification of the protozoan phyla Loukozoa Sulcozoa and Choanozoa European Journal of Protistology 49 2 115 178 Document online doi 10 1016 j ejop 2012 06 001 ISSN 0932 4739 PMID 23085100 a b Cavalier Smith Thomas Chao Ema E October 2010 Phylogeny and evolution of Apusomonadida Protozoa Apusozoa new genera and species Protist 161 4 549 576 doi 10 1016 j protis 2010 04 002 PMID 20537943 Brown Matthew W Sharpe Susan C Silberman Jeffrey D Heiss Aaron A Lang B Franz Simpson Alastair G B Roger Andrew J 2013 10 22 Phylogenomics demonstrates that breviate flagellates are related to opisthokonts and apusomonads Proceedings of the Royal Society of London B Biological Sciences 280 1769 20131755 doi 10 1098 rspb 2013 1755 ISSN 0962 8452 PMC 3768317 PMID 23986111 Eme Laura Sharpe Susan C Brown Matthew W Roger Andrew J 2014 08 01 On the Age of Eukaryotes Evaluating Evidence from Fossils and Molecular Clocks Cold Spring Harbor Perspectives in Biology 6 8 a016139 doi 10 1101 cshperspect a016139 ISSN 1943 0264 PMC 4107988 PMID 25085908 a b c d e Heiss AA Lee WJ Ishida KI Simpson AG 2015 Cultivation and Characterisation of New Species of Apusomonads the Sister Group to Opisthokonts Including Close Relatives of Thecamonas Chelonemonas n gen Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 62 5 637 649 doi 10 1111 jeu 12220 PMID 25912654 a b c d e f Torruella G Galindo LJ Moreira D Ciobanu M Heiss AA Yubuki N et al November 2022 Expanding the molecular and morphological diversity of Apusomonadida a deep branching group of gliding bacterivorous protists Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 70 2 e12956 doi 10 1111 jeu 12956 hdl 2117 404026 Sebe Pedros A Roger AJ Lang FB King N Ruiz Trillo I 2010 Ancient origin of the integrin mediated adhesion and signaling machinery Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America 107 22 10142 10147 doi 10 1073 pnas 1002257107 PMC 2890464 Sebe Pedros A Ruiz Trillo I 2010 Integrin mediated adhesion complex Communicative amp Integrative Biology 3 5 475 477 doi 10 4161 cib 3 5 12603 PMC 2974085 Adl SM Bass D Lane CE Lukes J Schoch CL Smirnov A Agatha S Berney C Brown MW Burki F Cardenas P Cepicka I Chistyakova L del Campo J Dunthorn M Edvardsen B Eglit Y Guillou L Hampl V Heiss AA Hoppenrath M James TY Karnkowska A Karpov S Kim E Kolisko M Kudryavtsev A Lahr DJG Lara E Le Gall L Lynn DH Mann DG Massana R Mitchell EAD Morrow C Park JS Pawlowski JW Powell MJ Richter DJ Rueckert S Shadwick L Shimano S Spiegel FW Torruella G Youssef N Zlatogursky V Zhang Q 2019 Revisions to the Classification Nomenclature and Diversity of Eukaryotes Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 66 1 4 119 doi 10 1111 jeu 12691 PMC 6492006 PMID 30257078 Yabuki A Tame A Mizuno K 2022 Podomonas kaiyoae n sp a novel apusomonad growing axenically Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 00 e12946 doi 10 1111 jeu 12946 External links edit nbsp Wikispecies has information related to Apusomonadidae Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Apusomonadidae amp oldid 1218390788, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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