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Limnofila

Limnofila (from Greek limnos 'marsh', and fila 'threads') is a genus of heterotrophic protists that live in freshwater habitats and feed on bacteria. They are also present in the soil ecosystem, where they play an important role as predators of bacteria. They are classified as a single family Limnofilidae and order Limnofilida.

Limnofila
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Diaphoretickes
Clade: SAR
Phylum: Cercozoa
Class: Granofilosea
Order: Limnofilida
Cavalier-Smith & Bass, 2009
Family: Limnofilidae
Cavalier-Smith & Bass, 2009
Genus: Limnofila
Cavalier-Smith & Bass, 2009[1]
Type species
Limnofila borokensis
Cavalier-Smith & Bass, 2009
Species
  • L. anglica
  • L. borokensis
  • L. longa
  • L. oxoniensis
  • L. mylnikovi

Characteristics edit

Limnofilida is phylogenetically defined as the largest clade that includes Limnofila, its only current member, but excludes Massisteria, which belongs to order Leucodictyida. It excludes the phylogenetically distant marine Nanofila which is morphologically similar but with unbranched filopodia. They are small freshwater heterotrophic protists with very slender, branching granular filopodia (or granulopodia), adhered to the substrate during feeding. Their trophic (feeding) phase is a small globular cell. They can present flagella, but are generally not visible under a light microscope.[1]

The cellular ultrastructure of two species of Limnofilida has been studied (L. borokensis and L. mylnikovi). They present flat mitochondrial cristae and complex concentric-structured extrusomes. Their filopodia (filose, or thread-like, pseudopodia) are supported by bundles of 2–6 microtubules. Unlike Heliomonadida, they have no prominent centrosome.[1]

Ecology edit

Limnofilida are bacterivorous eukaryotes, they feed on bacteria through phagocytosis. As such, they are important soil predators of microbes and belong to a diverse ecological community of soil protists.[2] Although they are described as a freshwater group,[1] they are present in soil microbial communities. They appear as a minority of cercozoan environmental DNA sequences or OTUs in temperate agricultural fields of Germany (1.3%).[2] They also compose a similar minority of the cercozoan OTUs found in two separate forest soils of Norway and the Czech Republic (2%), but are present in a consistent manner across all levels: leaf litter, pure soil, rhizosphere, and in association with plant roots.[3]

Systematics edit

 
 
L. anglica
L. longa
 
L. oxoniensis
 
L. borokensis
L. mylnikovi
class=notpageimage|
Type locality of all five Limnofila species[1]

Origin and etymology edit

The genus Limnofila was created in 2009 by protistologists Thomas Cavalier-Smith and David Bass, through a research article published in the journal Protist. It was described to encompass several naked amoebae with granular filose pseudopodia (or filopodia) that did not belong in phylogenetic analyses to either Endomyxa or Foraminifera. On the basis of phylogenetic analyses based on 18S rRNA genes, they were assigned to a clade of Cercozoa known as Granofilosea, which was newly described in the same article. In particular, the genus was assigned to a monotypic order Limnofilida and family Limnofilidae. Limnofilida was defined as the most inclusive clade containing Limnofila but excluding Massisteria, which belongs to Leucodictyida. The name Limnofila comes from Greek limnos 'marsh', and fila 'threads', to emphasise both their exclusively freshwater habitat and their exceedingly thin thread-like filopodia.[1]

Molecular phylogeny edit

Limnofila, and Limnofilida as a whole, are the earliest diverging clade within Granofilosea, followed by Leucodictyida, Cryptofilida and Desmothoracida. Granofilosea is, in turn, the sister group of Monadofilosa, which contains the remaining filose cercozoan amoebae. Below is a simplified cladogram of Granofilosea from a 2011 phylogenetic analysis based on 18S rRNA genes, where the clades of environmental DNA are not shown.[1][4]

Granofilosea
Limnofilida 

Limnofila

Monadofilosa

Species edit

There are 5 species of Limnofila, all described in the same 2009 paper where the genus was first described. Two species, L. anglica and L. longa, were isolated from a freshwater lake known as Priest Pot in Cumbria, England.[5] One species, L. oxoniensis, was isolated from garden soil in Oxford. The remaining two species, L. borokensis and L. mylnikovi, were isolated from samples collected in waste treatment plants of Borok, Yaroslavskaya oblast, Russia, and were originally misidentified as Gymnophrys cometa.[6][1]

  1. Limnofila anglicaCumbria, England.
  2. Limnofila borokensisBorok, Russia.
  3. Limnofila longa — Cumbria, England.
  4. Limnofila oxoniensisOxford, England.
  5. Limnofila mylnikovi — Borok, Russia (unsequenced).

References edit

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h Bass D, Chao EE, Nikolaev S, Yabuki A, Ishida K, Berney C, Pakzad U, Wylezich C, Cavalier-Smith T (2009). "Phylogeny of novel naked Filose and Reticulose Cercozoa: Granofilosea cl. n. and Proteomyxidea revised". Protist. 160 (1): 75–109. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2008.07.002. PMID 18952499.
  2. ^ a b Degrune, Florine; Dumack, Kenneth; Fiore-Donno, Anna Maria; Bonkowski, Michael; Sosa-Hernández, Moisés A.; Schloter, Michael; Kautz, Timo; Fischer, Doreen; Rillig, Matthias C. (April 2019). "Distinct communities of Cercozoa at different soil depths in a temperate agricultural field". FEMS Microbiology Ecology. 95 (4): fiz041. doi:10.1093/femsec/fiz041.
  3. ^ Fiore-Donno, Anna Maria; Human, Zander R.; Štursová, Martina; Mundra, Sunil; Morgado, Luis; Kauserud, Håvard; Baldrian, Petr; Bonkowski, Michael (2022). "Soil compartments (bulk soil, litter, root and rhizosphere) as main drivers of soil protistan communities distribution in forests with different nitrogen deposition". Soil Biology and Biochemistry. 168: 108628. doi:10.1016/j.soilbio.2022.108628. hdl:10852/101716.
  4. ^ Howe AT, Bass D, Scoble JM, Lewis R, Vickerman K, Arndt H, Cavalier-Smith T (2011). "Novel Cultured Protists Identify Deep-branching Environmental DNA Clades of Cercozoa: New Genera Tremula, Micrometopion, Minimassisteria, Nudifila, Peregrinia". Protist. 162 (2): 332–372. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2010.10.002. ISSN 1434-4610.
  5. ^ Calabuig I (2016), Priest Pot species list, Cumbria, Britain, Department of Biology, University of Copenhagen, doi:10.15468/lih6qc, retrieved 2023-09-22
  6. ^ Nikolaev, S.I.; et al. (2003). (PDF). Acta Protozoologica. 42: 183–190. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2009-06-17.

limnofila, confused, with, limnophila, limnophila, plant, from, greek, limnos, marsh, fila, threads, genus, heterotrophic, protists, that, live, freshwater, habitats, feed, bacteria, they, also, present, soil, ecosystem, where, they, play, important, role, pre. Not to be confused with Limnophila fly or Limnophila plant Limnofila from Greek limnos marsh and fila threads is a genus of heterotrophic protists that live in freshwater habitats and feed on bacteria They are also present in the soil ecosystem where they play an important role as predators of bacteria They are classified as a single family Limnofilidae and order Limnofilida LimnofilaScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaClade DiaphoretickesClade SARPhylum CercozoaClass GranofiloseaOrder LimnofilidaCavalier Smith amp Bass 2009Family LimnofilidaeCavalier Smith amp Bass 2009Genus LimnofilaCavalier Smith amp Bass 2009 1 Type speciesLimnofila borokensisCavalier Smith amp Bass 2009SpeciesL anglica L borokensis L longa L oxoniensis L mylnikovi Contents 1 Characteristics 2 Ecology 3 Systematics 3 1 Origin and etymology 3 2 Molecular phylogeny 3 3 Species 4 ReferencesCharacteristics editLimnofilida is phylogenetically defined as the largest clade that includes Limnofila its only current member but excludes Massisteria which belongs to order Leucodictyida It excludes the phylogenetically distant marine Nanofila which is morphologically similar but with unbranched filopodia They are small freshwater heterotrophic protists with very slender branching granular filopodia or granulopodia adhered to the substrate during feeding Their trophic feeding phase is a small globular cell They can present flagella but are generally not visible under a light microscope 1 The cellular ultrastructure of two species of Limnofilida has been studied L borokensis and L mylnikovi They present flat mitochondrial cristae and complex concentric structured extrusomes Their filopodia filose or thread like pseudopodia are supported by bundles of 2 6 microtubules Unlike Heliomonadida they have no prominent centrosome 1 Ecology editLimnofilida are bacterivorous eukaryotes they feed on bacteria through phagocytosis As such they are important soil predators of microbes and belong to a diverse ecological community of soil protists 2 Although they are described as a freshwater group 1 they are present in soil microbial communities They appear as a minority of cercozoan environmental DNA sequences or OTUs in temperate agricultural fields of Germany 1 3 2 They also compose a similar minority of the cercozoan OTUs found in two separate forest soils of Norway and the Czech Republic 2 but are present in a consistent manner across all levels leaf litter pure soil rhizosphere and in association with plant roots 3 Systematics edit nbsp nbsp L anglicaL longa nbsp L oxoniensis nbsp L borokensis L mylnikoviclass notpageimage Type locality of all five Limnofila species 1 Origin and etymology edit The genus Limnofila was created in 2009 by protistologists Thomas Cavalier Smith and David Bass through a research article published in the journal Protist It was described to encompass several naked amoebae with granular filose pseudopodia or filopodia that did not belong in phylogenetic analyses to either Endomyxa or Foraminifera On the basis of phylogenetic analyses based on 18S rRNA genes they were assigned to a clade of Cercozoa known as Granofilosea which was newly described in the same article In particular the genus was assigned to a monotypic order Limnofilida and family Limnofilidae Limnofilida was defined as the most inclusive clade containing Limnofila but excluding Massisteria which belongs to Leucodictyida The name Limnofila comes from Greek limnos marsh and fila threads to emphasise both their exclusively freshwater habitat and their exceedingly thin thread like filopodia 1 Molecular phylogeny edit Limnofila and Limnofilida as a whole are the earliest diverging clade within Granofilosea followed by Leucodictyida Cryptofilida and Desmothoracida Granofilosea is in turn the sister group of Monadofilosa which contains the remaining filose cercozoan amoebae Below is a simplified cladogram of Granofilosea from a 2011 phylogenetic analysis based on 18S rRNA genes where the clades of environmental DNA are not shown 1 4 Granofilosea Desmothoracida ClathrulinidaeCryptofilida MesofilaNanofilaLeucodictyida LeucodictyidaeMassisteriidaeLimnofilida LimnofilaMonadofilosa Species edit There are 5 species of Limnofila all described in the same 2009 paper where the genus was first described Two species L anglica and L longa were isolated from a freshwater lake known as Priest Pot in Cumbria England 5 One species L oxoniensis was isolated from garden soil in Oxford The remaining two species L borokensis and L mylnikovi were isolated from samples collected in waste treatment plants of Borok Yaroslavskaya oblast Russia and were originally misidentified as Gymnophrys cometa 6 1 Limnofila anglica Cumbria England Limnofila borokensis Borok Russia Limnofila longa Cumbria England Limnofila oxoniensis Oxford England Limnofila mylnikovi Borok Russia unsequenced References edit a b c d e f g h Bass D Chao EE Nikolaev S Yabuki A Ishida K Berney C Pakzad U Wylezich C Cavalier Smith T 2009 Phylogeny of novel naked Filose and Reticulose Cercozoa Granofilosea cl n and Proteomyxidea revised Protist 160 1 75 109 doi 10 1016 j protis 2008 07 002 PMID 18952499 a b Degrune Florine Dumack Kenneth Fiore Donno Anna Maria Bonkowski Michael Sosa Hernandez Moises A Schloter Michael Kautz Timo Fischer Doreen Rillig Matthias C April 2019 Distinct communities of Cercozoa at different soil depths in a temperate agricultural field FEMS Microbiology Ecology 95 4 fiz041 doi 10 1093 femsec fiz041 Fiore Donno Anna Maria Human Zander R Stursova Martina Mundra Sunil Morgado Luis Kauserud Havard Baldrian Petr Bonkowski Michael 2022 Soil compartments bulk soil litter root and rhizosphere as main drivers of soil protistan communities distribution in forests with different nitrogen deposition Soil Biology and Biochemistry 168 108628 doi 10 1016 j soilbio 2022 108628 hdl 10852 101716 Howe AT Bass D Scoble JM Lewis R Vickerman K Arndt H Cavalier Smith T 2011 Novel Cultured Protists Identify Deep branching Environmental DNA Clades of Cercozoa New Genera Tremula Micrometopion Minimassisteria Nudifila Peregrinia Protist 162 2 332 372 doi 10 1016 j protis 2010 10 002 ISSN 1434 4610 Calabuig I 2016 Priest Pot species list Cumbria Britain Department of Biology University of Copenhagen doi 10 15468 lih6qc retrieved 2023 09 22 Nikolaev S I et al 2003 Gymnophrys cometa and Lecythium sp are Core Cercozoa Evolutionary Implications PDF Acta Protozoologica 42 183 190 Archived from the original PDF on 2009 06 17 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Limnofila amp oldid 1213121670, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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