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Microsporidia

Microsporidia are a group of spore-forming unicellular parasites. These spores contain an extrusion apparatus that has a coiled polar tube ending in an anchoring disc at the apical part of the spore.[7] They were once considered protozoans or protists, but are now known to be fungi,[8] or a sister group to fungi.[9] These fungal microbes are obligate eukaryotic parasites that use a unique mechanism to infect host cells.[7] They have recently been discovered in a 2017 Cornell study to infect Coleoptera on a large scale. So far, about 1500 of the probably more than one million[10] species are named. Microsporidia are restricted to animal hosts, and all major groups of animals host microsporidia. Most infect insects, but they are also responsible for common diseases of crustaceans and fish. The named species of microsporidia usually infect one host species or a group of closely related taxa. Approximately 10 percent of the species are parasites of vertebrates —several species, most of which are opportunistic, can infect humans, in whom they can cause microsporidiosis.

Microsporidia
Sporoblast of
Fibrillanosema crangonycis
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Obazoa
(unranked): Opisthokonta
Clade: Holomycota
Kingdom: Fungi
Subkingdom: Rozellomyceta
Phylum: Rozellomycota
Class: Microsporidea
Corliss & Levine, 1963[1]
Orders[2]
  • Amblyosporida
  • Neopereziida
  • Ovavesiculida
  • Glugeida
  • Nosematida
Synonyms
  • Microsporidia Balbiani, 1882[3]
  • Microsporidiida Labbé, 1899
  • Microsporea Delphy, 1936 [1963], Levine et al., 1980[4][5]
  • Microspora Sprague, 1969, 1977[6]
  • Microsporida Tuzet et al. 1971

After infection they influence their hosts in various ways and all organs and tissues are invaded, though generally by different species of specialised microsporidia. Some species are lethal, and a few are used in biological control of insect pests. Parasitic castration, gigantism, or change of host sex are all potential effects of microsporidian parasitism (in insects). In the most advanced cases of parasitism the microsporidium rules the host cell completely and controls its metabolism and reproduction, forming a xenoma.[11]

Replication takes place within the host's cells, which are infected by means of unicellular spores. These vary from 1–40 μm, making them some of the smallest eukaryotes.[citation needed] Microsporidia that infect mammals are 1.0–4.0 μm.[12] They also have the smallest eukaryotic genomes.

The terms "microsporidium" (pl. "microsporidia") and "microsporidian" are used as vernacular names for members of the group. The name Microsporidium Balbiani, 1884[13] is also used as a catchall genus for incertae sedis members.[14]

Xenoma on flatfish caused by Glugea stephani

Morphology edit

 
Dictyocoela diporeiae.[15] A, meront and spore; B, spore wall; C, polar filament

Microsporidia lack mitochondria, instead possessing mitosomes. They also lack motile structures, such as flagella.

Microsporidia produce highly resistant spores, capable of surviving outside their host for up to several years. Spore morphology is useful in distinguishing between different species. Spores of most species are oval or pyriform, but rod-shaped or spherical spores are not unusual. A few genera produce spores of unique shape for the genus.

The spore is protected by a wall, consisting of three layers:

  • an outer electron-dense exospore
  • a median, wide and seemingly structureless endospore, containing chitin
  • a thin internal plasma membrane

In most cases there are two closely associated nuclei, forming a diplokaryon, but sometimes there is only one.
The anterior half of the spore contains a harpoon-like apparatus with a long, thread-like polar filament, which is coiled up in the posterior half of the spore. The anterior part of the polar filament is surrounded by a polaroplast, a lamella of membranes. Behind the polar filament, there is a posterior vacuole.[11]

Infection edit

In the gut of the host the spore germinates; it builds up osmotic pressure until its rigid wall ruptures at its thinnest point at the apex. The posterior vacuole swells, forcing the polar filament to rapidly eject the infectious content into the cytoplasm of the potential host. Simultaneously the material of the filament is rearranged to form a tube which functions as a hypodermic needle and penetrates the gut epithelium.

Once inside the host cell, a sporoplasm grows, dividing or forming a multinucleate plasmodium, before producing new spores. The life cycle varies considerably. Some have a simple asexual life cycle,[16] while others have a complex life cycle involving multiple hosts and both asexual and sexual reproduction. Different types of spores may be produced at different stages, probably with different functions including autoinfection (transmission within a single host).

Medical implications edit

In animals and humans, microsporidia often cause chronic, debilitating diseases rather than lethal infections. Effects on the host include reduced longevity, fertility, weight, and general vigor. Vertical transmission of microsporidia is frequently reported.

In the case of insect hosts, vertical transmission often occurs as transovarial transmission, where the microsporidian parasites pass from the ovaries of the female host into eggs and eventually multiply in the infected larvae. Amblyospora salinaria n. sp. which infects the mosquito Culex salinarius Coquillett, and Amblyospora californica which infects the mosquito Culex tarsalis Coquillett, provide typical examples of transovarial transmission of microsporidia.[17][18][19][20] Microsporidia, specifically the mosquito-infecting Vavraia culicis, are being explored as a possible 'evolution-proof' malaria-control method.[21] Microsporidian infection of Anopheles gambiae (the principal vector of Plasmodium falciparum malaria) reduces malarial infection within the mosquito, and shortens the mosquito lifespan.[22] As the majority of malaria-infected mosquitoes naturally die before the malaria parasite is mature enough to transmit, any increase in mosquito mortality through microsporidian-infection may reduce malaria transmission to humans. In May 2020, researchers reported that Microsporidia MB, a symbiont in the midgut and ovaries of An. arabiensis, significantly impaired transmission of P. falciparum, had "no overt effect" on the fitness of host mosquitoes, and was transmitted vertically (through inheritance).[23]

Clinical edit

Microsporidian infections of humans sometimes cause a disease called microsporidiosis. At least 14 microsporidian species, spread across eight genera, have been recognized as human pathogens. These include Trachipleistophora hominis.[24]

As hyperparasites edit

 
A hyperparasitic microsporidian, Nosema podocotyloidis, a parasite of a digenean which is itself a parasite of a fish.[25]

Microsporidia can infect a variety of hosts, including hosts which are themselves parasites. In that case, the microsporidian species is a hyperparasite, i.e. a parasite of a parasite. As an example, more than eighteen species are known which parasitize digeneans (parasitic flatworms). These digeneans are themselves parasites in various vertebrates and molluscs. Eight of these species belong to the genus Nosema.[25] Similarly, the microsporidian species Toguebayea baccigeri is a parasite of a digenean, the faustulid Bacciger israelensis, itself an intestinal parasite of a marine fish, the bogue Boops boops (Teleostei, Sparidae).[26]

Genomes edit

Microsporidia have the smallest known (nuclear) eukaryotic genomes. The parasitic lifestyle of microsporidia has led to a loss of many mitochondrial and Golgi genes, and even their ribosomal RNAs are reduced in size compared with those of most eukaryotes. As a consequence, the genomes of microsporidia are much smaller than those of other eukaryotes. Currently known microsporidial genomes are 2.5 to 11.6 Mb in size, encoding from 1,848 to 3,266 proteins which is in the same range as many bacteria.[27]

Horizontal gene transfer (HGT) seems to have occurred many times in microsporidia. For instance, the genomes of Encephalitozoon romaleae and Trachipleistophora hominis contain genes that derive from animals and bacteria, and some even from fungi.[27]

DNA repair edit

The Rad9-Rad1-Hus1 protein complex (also known as the 9-1-1 complex) in eukaryotes is recruited to sites of DNA damage where it is considered to help trigger the checkpoint-signaling cascade. Genes that code for heterotrimeric 9-1-1 are present in microsporidia.[28] In addition to the 9-1-1 complex, other components of the DNA repair machinery are also present indicting that repair of DNA damage likely occurs in microsporidia.[28]

Classification edit

The first described microsporidian genus, Nosema, was initially put by Nägeli in the fungal group Schizomycetes together with some bacteria and yeasts.[29][30] For some time microsporidia were considered as very primitive eukaryotes, placed in the protozoan group Cnidospora.[1] Later, especially because of the lack of mitochondria, they were placed along with the other Protozoa such as diplomonads, parabasalids and archamoebae in the protozoan-group Archezoa.[31] More recent research has falsified this theory of early origin (for all of these). Instead, microsporidia are proposed to be highly developed and specialized organisms, which just dispensed functions that are needed no longer, because they are supplied by the host.[32] Furthermore, spore-forming organisms in general do have a complex system of reproduction, both sexual and asexual, which look far from primitive.

Since the mid-2000s microsporidia are placed within the Fungi or as a sister-group of the Fungi with a common ancestor.[33][34][35][36]

Work to identify clades is largely based on habitat and host. Three classes of Microsporidia are proposed by Vossbrinck and Debrunner-Vossbrinck, based on the habitat: Aquasporidia, Marinosporidia and Terresporidia.[37]

A second classification by Cavalier-Smith 1993:[38]

  • Subphyla Rudimicrospora Cavalier-Smith 1993
    • Class Minisporea Cavalier-Smith 1993
      • Order Minisporida Sprague, 1972
    • Class Metchnikovellea Weiser, 1977
      • Order Metchnikovellida Vivier, 1975
  • Subphyla Polaroplasta Cavalier-Smith 1993
    • Class Pleistophoridea Cavalier-Smith 1993
      • Order Pleistophorida Stempell 1906
    • Class Disporea Cavalier-Smith 1993
      • Subclass Unikaryotia Cavalier-Smith 1993
      • Subclass Diplokaryotia Cavalier-Smith 1993
Alimov 2007 [39] Wijayawardene et al. 2020[40]
  • Class Metchnikovellea
    • Order Metchnikovellida
      • Family Amphiacanthidae
      • Family Metchnikovellidae
  • Class Microsporea
    • Family Cougourdellidae
    • Family Facilisporidae
    • Family Heterovesiculidae
    • Family Myosporidae
    • Family Nadelsporidae
    • Family Neonosemoidiidae
    • Family Ordosporidae
    • Family Pseudonosematidae
    • Family Telomyxidae
    • Family Toxoglugeidae
    • Family Tubulinosematidae
    • Subclass Haplophasea
      • Order Chytridiopsida
      • Order Glugeida
        • Family Glugeidae
        • Family Gurleyidae
        • Family Encephalitozoonidae
        • Family Abelsporidae
        • Family Tuzetiidae
        • Family Microfilidae
        • Family Unikaryonidae
    • Subclass Dihaplophasea
      • Order Meiodihaplophasida
        • Superfamily Thelohanioidea
          • Family Thelohaniidae
          • Family Duboscqiidae
          • Family Janacekiidae
          • Family Pereziidae
          • Family Striatosporidae
          • Family Cylindrosporidae
        • Superfamily Burenelloidea
          • Family Burenellidae
        • Superfamily Amblyosporoidea
          • Family Amblyosporidae
      • Order Dissociodihaplophasida
        • Superfamily Nosematoidea
          • Family Nosematidae
          • Family Ichthyosporidiidae
          • Family Caudosporidae
          • Family Pseudopleistophoridae
          • Family Mrazekiidae
        • Superfamily Culicosporoidea
          • Family Culicosporidae
          • Family Culicosporellidae
          • Family Golbergiidae
          • Family Spragueidae
        • Superfamily Ovavesiculoidea
          • Family Ovavesiculidae
          • Family Tetramicridae
  • Class Chytridiopsidea Issi 1980
  • Class Metchnikovellea Weiser 1977 em. Cavalier-Smith 1993 [Manubrispora Cavalier-Smith 1998]
    • Order Metchnikovellida Vivier 1977
      • Family Amphiacanthidae Larsson 2000
      • Family Metchnikovellidae Caullery & Mesnil 1897
  • Class Microsporidea Delphy 1936 ex Levine & Corliss 1963
    • Family Abelsporidae Azevedo 1987
    • Family Areosporidae Stentiford et al. 2014
    • Family Burenellidae Jouvenaz & Hazard 1978
    • Family Burkeidae Sprague 1977
    • Family Cougourdellidae Poisson 1953
    • Family Cylindrosporidae Issi & Voronin 1986
    • Family Duboscqiidae Sprague 1977
    • Family Golbergiidae Issi 1986
    • Family Microfilidae Sprague, Becnel & Hazard 1992
    • Family Neonosemoidiidae Faye, Toguebaye & Bouix 1996
    • Family Pleistosporidiidae Codreanu-Balcesci & Codreanu 1982
    • Family Pseudopleistophoridae Sprague 1977
    • Family Striatosporidae Issi & Voronin 1986
    • Family Telomyxidae Leger & Hesse 1910
    • Family Toxoglugeidae Voronin 1993
    • Family Tuzetiidae Sprague, Tuzet & Maurand 1977
    • Order Amblyosporida Tokarev & Issi 2020
      • Family Amblyosporidae Weiser 1977 [Culicosporidae; Culicosporellidae]
      • Family Caudosporidae Weiser 1958 [Flabelliformidae]
      • Family Gurleyidae Sprague 1977
    • Order Neopereziida Tokarev & Issi 2020
      • Family Janacekiidae Issi et al. 1990
      • Family Berwaldiidae Simakova, Tokarev & Issi 2018a [Fibrillasporidae]
      • Family Neopereziidae Voronin 1999 [Pseudonosematidae]
      • Family Tubulinosematidae Franzen et al. 2005
    • Order Ovavesiculida Tokarev & Issi 2020
      • Family Ovavesiculidae Sprague, Becnel & Hazard 1992
    • Order Glugeida Issi 1986
      • Family Facilisporidae Jones, Prosperi-Porta & Kim 2012
      • Family Glugeidae Thélohan 1892 [Ichthyosporidiidae]
      • Family Myosporidae Stentiford et al. 2010
      • Family Pereziidae Loubes et al. 1977 [Nadelsporidae]
      • Family Pleistophoridae Doflein 1901
      • Family Spragueidae Weissenberg 1976 [Tetramicridae]
      • Family Thelohaniidae Hazard & Oldacre 1975 [Coccosporidae]
      • Family Unikaryonidae Sprague 1977
    • Order Nosematida Labbé 1899
      • Family Encephalitozoonidae Voronin 1989
      • Family Enterocytozoonidae Cali & Owen 1990
      • Family Heterovesiculidae Lange et al. 1995
      • Family Mrazekiidae Léger & Hesse 1922 [Rectisporidae]
      • Family Nosematidae Labbe 1899
      • Family Ordosporidae Larsson, Ebert & Vávra 1997

See also edit

References edit

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  2. ^ Wijayawardene, N.N.; Hyde, K.D.; Dai, D.Q.; Sánchez-García, M.; Goto, B.T.; Saxena, R.K.; et al. (2022). "Outline of Fungi and fungus-like taxa – 2021". Mycosphere. 13 (1): 53–453. doi:10.5943/mycosphere/13/1/2. hdl:10481/76378. S2CID 249054641.
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External links edit

  •   Data related to Microsporidia at Wikispecies
  • BioHealthBase Bioinformatics Resource Center Database of microspordia sequences and related information.
  • Microsporidia at the U.S. National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings (MeSH)

microsporidia, this, article, about, parasitic, fungi, group, ascomycete, fungi, genus, microsporum, green, algae, genus, microspora, beetle, family, microsporidae, group, spore, forming, unicellular, parasites, these, spores, contain, extrusion, apparatus, th. This article is about the parasitic fungi group For the ascomycete fungi genus see Microsporum For the green algae genus see Microspora For the beetle family see Microsporidae Microsporidia are a group of spore forming unicellular parasites These spores contain an extrusion apparatus that has a coiled polar tube ending in an anchoring disc at the apical part of the spore 7 They were once considered protozoans or protists but are now known to be fungi 8 or a sister group to fungi 9 These fungal microbes are obligate eukaryotic parasites that use a unique mechanism to infect host cells 7 They have recently been discovered in a 2017 Cornell study to infect Coleoptera on a large scale So far about 1500 of the probably more than one million 10 species are named Microsporidia are restricted to animal hosts and all major groups of animals host microsporidia Most infect insects but they are also responsible for common diseases of crustaceans and fish The named species of microsporidia usually infect one host species or a group of closely related taxa Approximately 10 percent of the species are parasites of vertebrates several species most of which are opportunistic can infect humans in whom they can cause microsporidiosis MicrosporidiaSporoblast ofFibrillanosema crangonycisScientific classificationDomain EukaryotaClade Obazoa unranked OpisthokontaClade HolomycotaKingdom FungiSubkingdom RozellomycetaPhylum RozellomycotaClass MicrosporideaCorliss amp Levine 1963 1 Orders 2 Amblyosporida Neopereziida Ovavesiculida Glugeida NosematidaSynonymsMicrosporidia Balbiani 1882 3 Microsporidiida Labbe 1899 Microsporea Delphy 1936 1963 Levine et al 1980 4 5 Microspora Sprague 1969 1977 6 Microsporida Tuzet et al 1971After infection they influence their hosts in various ways and all organs and tissues are invaded though generally by different species of specialised microsporidia Some species are lethal and a few are used in biological control of insect pests Parasitic castration gigantism or change of host sex are all potential effects of microsporidian parasitism in insects In the most advanced cases of parasitism the microsporidium rules the host cell completely and controls its metabolism and reproduction forming a xenoma 11 Replication takes place within the host s cells which are infected by means of unicellular spores These vary from 1 40 mm making them some of the smallest eukaryotes citation needed Microsporidia that infect mammals are 1 0 4 0 mm 12 They also have the smallest eukaryotic genomes The terms microsporidium pl microsporidia and microsporidian are used as vernacular names for members of the group The name Microsporidium Balbiani 1884 13 is also used as a catchall genus for incertae sedis members 14 Xenoma on flatfish caused by Glugea stephaniContents 1 Morphology 2 Infection 3 Medical implications 3 1 Clinical 4 As hyperparasites 5 Genomes 6 DNA repair 7 Classification 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksMorphology edit nbsp Dictyocoela diporeiae 15 A meront and spore B spore wall C polar filamentMicrosporidia lack mitochondria instead possessing mitosomes They also lack motile structures such as flagella Microsporidia produce highly resistant spores capable of surviving outside their host for up to several years Spore morphology is useful in distinguishing between different species Spores of most species are oval or pyriform but rod shaped or spherical spores are not unusual A few genera produce spores of unique shape for the genus The spore is protected by a wall consisting of three layers an outer electron dense exospore a median wide and seemingly structureless endospore containing chitin a thin internal plasma membraneIn most cases there are two closely associated nuclei forming a diplokaryon but sometimes there is only one The anterior half of the spore contains a harpoon like apparatus with a long thread like polar filament which is coiled up in the posterior half of the spore The anterior part of the polar filament is surrounded by a polaroplast a lamella of membranes Behind the polar filament there is a posterior vacuole 11 Infection editIn the gut of the host the spore germinates it builds up osmotic pressure until its rigid wall ruptures at its thinnest point at the apex The posterior vacuole swells forcing the polar filament to rapidly eject the infectious content into the cytoplasm of the potential host Simultaneously the material of the filament is rearranged to form a tube which functions as a hypodermic needle and penetrates the gut epithelium Once inside the host cell a sporoplasm grows dividing or forming a multinucleate plasmodium before producing new spores The life cycle varies considerably Some have a simple asexual life cycle 16 while others have a complex life cycle involving multiple hosts and both asexual and sexual reproduction Different types of spores may be produced at different stages probably with different functions including autoinfection transmission within a single host Medical implications editIn animals and humans microsporidia often cause chronic debilitating diseases rather than lethal infections Effects on the host include reduced longevity fertility weight and general vigor Vertical transmission of microsporidia is frequently reported In the case of insect hosts vertical transmission often occurs as transovarial transmission where the microsporidian parasites pass from the ovaries of the female host into eggs and eventually multiply in the infected larvae Amblyospora salinaria n sp which infects the mosquito Culex salinarius Coquillett and Amblyospora californica which infects the mosquito Culex tarsalis Coquillett provide typical examples of transovarial transmission of microsporidia 17 18 19 20 Microsporidia specifically the mosquito infecting Vavraia culicis are being explored as a possible evolution proof malaria control method 21 Microsporidian infection of Anopheles gambiae the principal vector of Plasmodium falciparum malaria reduces malarial infection within the mosquito and shortens the mosquito lifespan 22 As the majority of malaria infected mosquitoes naturally die before the malaria parasite is mature enough to transmit any increase in mosquito mortality through microsporidian infection may reduce malaria transmission to humans In May 2020 researchers reported that Microsporidia MB a symbiont in the midgut and ovaries of An arabiensis significantly impaired transmission of P falciparum had no overt effect on the fitness of host mosquitoes and was transmitted vertically through inheritance 23 Clinical edit Main article Microsporidiosis This section needs expansion You can help by adding to it November 2013 Microsporidian infections of humans sometimes cause a disease called microsporidiosis At least 14 microsporidian species spread across eight genera have been recognized as human pathogens These include Trachipleistophora hominis 24 As hyperparasites edit nbsp A hyperparasitic microsporidian Nosema podocotyloidis a parasite of a digenean which is itself a parasite of a fish 25 Microsporidia can infect a variety of hosts including hosts which are themselves parasites In that case the microsporidian species is a hyperparasite i e a parasite of a parasite As an example more than eighteen species are known which parasitize digeneans parasitic flatworms These digeneans are themselves parasites in various vertebrates and molluscs Eight of these species belong to the genus Nosema 25 Similarly the microsporidian species Toguebayea baccigeri is a parasite of a digenean the faustulid Bacciger israelensis itself an intestinal parasite of a marine fish the bogue Boops boops Teleostei Sparidae 26 Genomes editMicrosporidia have the smallest known nuclear eukaryotic genomes The parasitic lifestyle of microsporidia has led to a loss of many mitochondrial and Golgi genes and even their ribosomal RNAs are reduced in size compared with those of most eukaryotes As a consequence the genomes of microsporidia are much smaller than those of other eukaryotes Currently known microsporidial genomes are 2 5 to 11 6 Mb in size encoding from 1 848 to 3 266 proteins which is in the same range as many bacteria 27 Horizontal gene transfer HGT seems to have occurred many times in microsporidia For instance the genomes of Encephalitozoon romaleae and Trachipleistophora hominis contain genes that derive from animals and bacteria and some even from fungi 27 DNA repair editThe Rad9 Rad1 Hus1 protein complex also known as the 9 1 1 complex in eukaryotes is recruited to sites of DNA damage where it is considered to help trigger the checkpoint signaling cascade Genes that code for heterotrimeric 9 1 1 are present in microsporidia 28 In addition to the 9 1 1 complex other components of the DNA repair machinery are also present indicting that repair of DNA damage likely occurs in microsporidia 28 Classification editFurther information Wikispecies Microsporidia The first described microsporidian genus Nosema was initially put by Nageli in the fungal group Schizomycetes together with some bacteria and yeasts 29 30 For some time microsporidia were considered as very primitive eukaryotes placed in the protozoan group Cnidospora 1 Later especially because of the lack of mitochondria they were placed along with the other Protozoa such as diplomonads parabasalids and archamoebae in the protozoan group Archezoa 31 More recent research has falsified this theory of early origin for all of these Instead microsporidia are proposed to be highly developed and specialized organisms which just dispensed functions that are needed no longer because they are supplied by the host 32 Furthermore spore forming organisms in general do have a complex system of reproduction both sexual and asexual which look far from primitive Since the mid 2000s microsporidia are placed within the Fungi or as a sister group of the Fungi with a common ancestor 33 34 35 36 Work to identify clades is largely based on habitat and host Three classes of Microsporidia are proposed by Vossbrinck and Debrunner Vossbrinck based on the habitat Aquasporidia Marinosporidia and Terresporidia 37 A second classification by Cavalier Smith 1993 38 Subphyla Rudimicrospora Cavalier Smith 1993 Class Minisporea Cavalier Smith 1993 Order Minisporida Sprague 1972 Class Metchnikovellea Weiser 1977 Order Metchnikovellida Vivier 1975 Subphyla Polaroplasta Cavalier Smith 1993 Class Pleistophoridea Cavalier Smith 1993 Order Pleistophorida Stempell 1906 Class Disporea Cavalier Smith 1993 Subclass Unikaryotia Cavalier Smith 1993 Subclass Diplokaryotia Cavalier Smith 1993Alimov 2007 39 Wijayawardene et al 2020 40 Class Metchnikovellea Order Metchnikovellida Family Amphiacanthidae Family Metchnikovellidae Class Microsporea Family Cougourdellidae Family Facilisporidae Family Heterovesiculidae Family Myosporidae Family Nadelsporidae Family Neonosemoidiidae Family Ordosporidae Family Pseudonosematidae Family Telomyxidae Family Toxoglugeidae Family Tubulinosematidae Subclass Haplophasea Order Chytridiopsida Family Chytridiopsidae Family Buxtehudeidae Family Enterocytozoonidae Family Burkeidae Family Hesseidae Order Glugeida Family Glugeidae Family Gurleyidae Family Encephalitozoonidae Family Abelsporidae Family Tuzetiidae Family Microfilidae Family Unikaryonidae Subclass Dihaplophasea Order Meiodihaplophasida Superfamily Thelohanioidea Family Thelohaniidae Family Duboscqiidae Family Janacekiidae Family Pereziidae Family Striatosporidae Family Cylindrosporidae Superfamily Burenelloidea Family Burenellidae Superfamily Amblyosporoidea Family Amblyosporidae Order Dissociodihaplophasida Superfamily Nosematoidea Family Nosematidae Family Ichthyosporidiidae Family Caudosporidae Family Pseudopleistophoridae Family Mrazekiidae Superfamily Culicosporoidea Family Culicosporidae Family Culicosporellidae Family Golbergiidae Family Spragueidae Superfamily Ovavesiculoidea Family Ovavesiculidae Family Tetramicridae Class Chytridiopsidea Issi 1980 Order Chytridiopsida Weiser 1974 Family Buxtehudeidae Larsson 1980 Family Hesseidae Ormieres amp Sprague 1973 Family Chytridiopsidae Sprague Ormieres amp Manier 1972 Class Metchnikovellea Weiser 1977 em Cavalier Smith 1993 Manubrispora Cavalier Smith 1998 Order Metchnikovellida Vivier 1977 Family Amphiacanthidae Larsson 2000 Family Metchnikovellidae Caullery amp Mesnil 1897 Class Microsporidea Delphy 1936 ex Levine amp Corliss 1963 Family Abelsporidae Azevedo 1987 Family Areosporidae Stentiford et al 2014 Family Burenellidae Jouvenaz amp Hazard 1978 Family Burkeidae Sprague 1977 Family Cougourdellidae Poisson 1953 Family Cylindrosporidae Issi amp Voronin 1986 Family Duboscqiidae Sprague 1977 Family Golbergiidae Issi 1986 Family Microfilidae Sprague Becnel amp Hazard 1992 Family Neonosemoidiidae Faye Toguebaye amp Bouix 1996 Family Pleistosporidiidae Codreanu Balcesci amp Codreanu 1982 Family Pseudopleistophoridae Sprague 1977 Family Striatosporidae Issi amp Voronin 1986 Family Telomyxidae Leger amp Hesse 1910 Family Toxoglugeidae Voronin 1993 Family Tuzetiidae Sprague Tuzet amp Maurand 1977 Order Amblyosporida Tokarev amp Issi 2020 Family Amblyosporidae Weiser 1977 Culicosporidae Culicosporellidae Family Caudosporidae Weiser 1958 Flabelliformidae Family Gurleyidae Sprague 1977 Order Neopereziida Tokarev amp Issi 2020 Family Janacekiidae Issi et al 1990 Family Berwaldiidae Simakova Tokarev amp Issi 2018a Fibrillasporidae Family Neopereziidae Voronin 1999 Pseudonosematidae Family Tubulinosematidae Franzen et al 2005 Order Ovavesiculida Tokarev amp Issi 2020 Family Ovavesiculidae Sprague Becnel amp Hazard 1992 Order Glugeida Issi 1986 Family Facilisporidae Jones Prosperi Porta amp Kim 2012 Family Glugeidae Thelohan 1892 Ichthyosporidiidae Family Myosporidae Stentiford et al 2010 Family Pereziidae Loubes et al 1977 Nadelsporidae Family Pleistophoridae Doflein 1901 Family Spragueidae Weissenberg 1976 Tetramicridae Family Thelohaniidae Hazard amp Oldacre 1975 Coccosporidae Family Unikaryonidae Sprague 1977 Order Nosematida Labbe 1899 Family Encephalitozoonidae Voronin 1989 Family Enterocytozoonidae Cali amp Owen 1990 Family Heterovesiculidae Lange et al 1995 Family Mrazekiidae Leger amp Hesse 1922 Rectisporidae Family Nosematidae Labbe 1899 Family Ordosporidae Larsson Ebert amp Vavra 1997See also editList of Microsporidian genera Glugea a genus of microsporidia Nosema apis a microsporidian parasite of beesReferences edit a b Corliss JO Levine ND 1963 Establishment of the Microsporidea as a new class in the protozoan subphylum Cnidospora The Journal of Protozoology 10 Suppl 26 27 doi 10 1111 jeu 1963 10 issue s3 Wijayawardene N N Hyde K D Dai D Q Sanchez Garcia M Goto B T Saxena R K et al 2022 Outline of Fungi and fungus like taxa 2021 Mycosphere 13 1 53 453 doi 10 5943 mycosphere 13 1 2 hdl 10481 76378 S2CID 249054641 Balbiani G 1882 Sur les microsporidies ou psorospermies des Articules C R Acad Sci 95 1168 71 Delphy J 1936 Sous regne des Protozoaires In Perrier R ed La Faune de la France en tableaux synoptiques illustres vol 1A Delagrave Paris Levine N D et al 1980 A Newly Revised Classification of the Protozoa The Journal of Protozoology 27 1 37 58 doi 10 1111 j 1550 7408 1980 tb04228 x PMID 6989987 Sprague V 1977 Classification and phylogeny of the Microsporidia In Comparative pathobiology vol 2 Systematics of the Microsporidia Lee A Bulla amp Thomas C Cheng ed pp 1 30 New York Plenum Press 1 a b Franzen C 2005 How do Microsporidia invade cells Folia Parasitologica 52 1 2 36 40 doi org 10 14411 fp 2005 005 Hibbett D S et al 2007 A higher level phylogenetic classification of the Fungi PDF Mycological Research 111 5 509 47 doi 10 1016 j mycres 2007 03 004 PMID 17572334 S2CID 4686378 Silar Philippe 2016 Protistes Eucaryotes Origine Evolution et Biologie des Microbes Eucaryotes HAL p 462 ISBN 978 2 9555841 0 1 Hawksworth David 2001 The magnitude of fungal diversity The 1 5 million spices estimate revisited Mycological Research 105 12 1422 doi 10 1017 S0953756201004725 a b Ronny Larsson Lund University Department of Cell and Organism Biology Cytology and taxonomy of the microsporidia Archived 2009 09 12 at the Wayback Machine 2004 Didier ES Apr 2005 Microsporidiosis an emerging and opportunistic infection in humans and animals Acta Trop 94 1 61 76 doi 10 1016 j actatropica 2005 01 010 PMID 15777637 Balbiani G 1884 Les Psorospermies des Articules ou Microsporidies pp 150 168 184 In Lecons sur les sporozoaires Paris Doin 2 Hoffman G 1999 Parasites of North American Freshwater Fishes 2nd edn University of California Press Berkeley California USA p 89 3 Winters A D Faisal M 2014 Molecular and ultrastructural characterization of Dictyocoela diporeiae n sp Microsporidia a parasite of Diporeia spp Amphipoda Gammaridea Parasite 21 26 doi 10 1051 parasite 2014028 PMC 4059264 PMID 24934702 Ironside JE 2007 Multiple losses of sex within a single genus of Microsporidia BMC Evolutionary Biology 7 48 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 7 48 PMC 1853083 PMID 17394631 Andreadis TG Hall DW August 1979 Development ultrastructure and mode of transmission of Amblyospora sp Microspora in the mosquito The Journal of Protozoology 26 3 444 52 doi 10 1111 j 1550 7408 1979 tb04651 x PMID 536933 Andreadis TG Hall DW September 1979 Significance of transovarial infections of Amblyospora sp Microspora Thelohaniidae in relation to parasite maintenance in the mosquito Culex salinarius Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 34 2 152 7 doi 10 1016 0022 2011 79 90095 8 PMID 536610 Jahn GC Hall DW Zam SG 1986 A comparison of the life cycles of two Amblyospora Microspora Amblyosporidae in the mosquitoes Culex salinarius and Culex tarsalis Coquillett Journal of the Florida Anti Mosquito Association 57 1 24 27 Becnel JJ Andreadis TG May 1998 Amblyospora salinaria n sp Microsporidia amblyosporidae parasite of Culex salinarius Diptera culicidae its life cycle stages in an intermediate host Journal of Invertebrate Pathology 71 3 258 62 doi 10 1006 jipa 1998 4729 PMID 9538031 Koella Jacob C Lorenz Lena Bargielowski Irka 2009 Chapter 12 Microsporidians as Evolution Proof Agents of Malaria Control Advances in Parasitology Vol 68 pp 315 327 doi 10 1016 S0065 308X 08 00612 X ISBN 978 0 12 374787 7 PMID 19289199 Bargielowski I Koella JC 2009 Baylis M ed A Possible Mechanism for the Suppression of Plasmodium berghei Development in the Mosquito Anopheles gambiae by the Microsporidian Vavraia culicis PLOS ONE 4 3 e4676 Bibcode 2009PLoSO 4 4676B doi 10 1371 journal pone 0004676 PMC 2651578 PMID 19277119 Herren JK Mbaisi L Mararo E et al 2020 A microsporidian impairs Plasmodium falciparum transmission in Anopheles arabiensis mosquitoes Nature Communications 11 2187 2187 Bibcode 2020NatCo 11 2187H doi 10 1038 s41467 020 16121 y PMC 7198529 PMID 32366903 Heinz E Williams TA Nakjang S et al Oct 2012 The genome of the obligate intracellular parasite Trachipleistophora hominis New insights into microsporidian genome dynamics and reductive evolution PLOS Pathog 8 10 e1002979 doi 10 1371 journal ppat 1002979 PMC 3486916 PMID 23133373 a b Toguebaye B S Quilichini Y Diagne P M Marchand B 2014 Ultrastructure and development of Nosema podocotyloidis n sp Microsporidia a hyperparasite of Podocotyloides magnatestis Trematoda a parasite of Parapristipoma octolineatum Teleostei Parasite 21 44 doi 10 1051 parasite 2014044 PMC 4150386 PMID 25174849 nbsp Miquel Jordi Kacem Hichem Baz Gonzalez Edgar Foronda Pilar Marchand Bernard 2022 Ultrastructural and molecular study of the microsporidian Toguebayea baccigeri n gen n sp a hyperparasite of the digenean trematode Bacciger israelensis Faustulidae a parasite of Boops boops Teleostei Sparidae Parasite EDP Sciences 29 2 doi 10 1051 parasite 2022007 ISSN 1776 1042 PMC 8805611 PMID 35103588 S2CID 246443154 nbsp a b Corradi N Selman M 2013 Latest Progress in Microsporidian Genome Research Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 60 3 309 312 doi 10 1111 jeu 12030 PMID 23445243 S2CID 24504235 a b Mascarenhas Dos Santos AC Julian AT Pombert JF 2022 04 10 The Rad9 Rad1 Hus1 DNA Repair Clamp is Found in Microsporidia Genome Biology and Evolution 14 4 evac053 doi 10 1093 gbe evac053 PMC 9053307 PMID 35439302 Nageli C von 1857 Uber die neue Krankheit der Seidenraupe und verwandte Organismen pp 760 61 In Caspary R ed Bericht uber die Verhandlungen der 33 Versammlung deutscher Naturforscher und Aerzte gehalten in Bonn von 18 bis 24 September 1857 Botanische Zeitung 15 749 776 Keeling P J Fast N M 2002 Microsporidia biology and evolution of highly reduced intracellular parasites PDF Annual Review of Microbiology 56 1 93 116 doi 10 1146 annurev micro 56 012302 160854 PMID 12142484 Cavalier Smith T 1993 Kingdom protozoa and its 18 phyla Microbiological Reviews 57 4 953 994 doi 10 1128 MR 57 4 953 994 1993 PMC 372943 PMID 8302218 Keeling PJ Slamovits CH December 2004 Simplicity and Complexity of Microsporidian Genomes Eukaryotic Cell 3 6 1363 9 doi 10 1128 EC 3 6 1363 1369 2004 PMC 539024 PMID 15590811 Fischer WM Palmer JD September 2005 Evidence from small subunit ribosomal RNA sequences for a fungal origin of Microsporidia Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution 36 3 606 22 doi 10 1016 j ympev 2005 03 031 PMID 15923129 Liu YJ Hodson MC Hall BD 2006 Loss of the flagellum happened only once in the fungal lineage phylogenetic structure of Kingdom Fungi inferred from RNA polymerase II subunit genes BMC Evolutionary Biology 6 74 doi 10 1186 1471 2148 6 74 PMC 1599754 PMID 17010206 Gill EE Fast NM June 2006 Assessing the microsporidia fungi relationship Combined phylogenetic analysis of eight genes Gene 375 103 9 doi 10 1016 j gene 2006 02 023 PMID 16626896 Lee SC Corradi N Byrnes EJ et al November 2008 Microsporidia evolved from ancestral sexual fungi Current Biology 18 21 1675 9 doi 10 1016 j cub 2008 09 030 PMC 2654606 PMID 18976912 Vossbrinck CR Debrunner Vossbrinck BA May 2005 Molecular phylogeny of the Microsporidia ecological ultrastructural and taxonomic considerations Folia Parasitologica 52 1 2 131 42 discussion 130 doi 10 14411 fp 2005 017 PMID 16004372 Cavalier Smith 1993 Kingdom Protozoa and its 18 phyla Microbiological Reviews 57 4 953 94 doi 10 1128 MR 57 4 953 994 1993 PMC 372943 PMID 8302218 Alimov A F ed May 2007 Protista 2 Handbook on zoology Nauka p 1141 ISBN 9785020262249 Wijayawardene NN Hyde KD Al Ani LK Tedersoo L Haelewaters D Rajeshkumar KC et al 2020 Outline of Fungi and fungus like taxa PDF Mycosphere 11 1 1060 1456 doi 10 5943 mycosphere 11 1 8 ISSN 2077 7019 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Microsporidia nbsp Data related to Microsporidia at Wikispecies BioHealthBase Bioinformatics Resource Center Database of microspordia sequences and related information Microsporidia at the U S National Library of Medicine Medical Subject Headings MeSH Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Microsporidia amp oldid 1193929002, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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