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Myxozoa

Myxozoa (etymology: Greek: μύξα myxa "slime" or "mucus"[1] + thematic vowel o + ζῷον zoon "animal"[2]) is a subphylum of aquatic cnidarian animals – all obligate parasites. It contains the smallest animals ever known to have lived. Over 2,180 species have been described and some estimates have suggested at least 30,000 undiscovered species.[3] Many have a two-host lifecycle, involving a fish and an annelid worm or a bryozoan. The average size of a myxosporean spore usually ranges from 10 μm to 20 μm,[4] whereas that of a malacosporean (a subclade of the Myxozoa) spore can be up to 2 mm. Myxozoans can live in both freshwater and marine habitats.

Myxozoa
Triactinomyxon stage of Myxobolus cerebralis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Animalia
Phylum: Cnidaria
Subphylum: Myxozoa
Grassé, 1970
Classes

Myxozoans are highly derived cnidarians that have undergone dramatic evolution from a free swimming, self-sufficient jellyfish-like creature into their current form of obligate parasites composed of very few cells – sometimes only a single cell. As myxozoans evolved into microscopic parasites, they lost many genes responsible for multicellular development, coordination, cell-cell communication, and even, in some cases, aerobic respiration. The genomes of some myxozoans are now among the smallest genomes of any known animal species.[5][6]

Life cycle and pathology

Myxozoans are endoparasitic animals exhibiting complex life cycles that, in most of the documented cases, involve an intermediate host, usually a fish, but in rare cases amphibians,[7] reptiles,[7] birds,[8] and mammals;[9][10] and a definitive host, usually an annelid or an ectoproct.

 
Myxozoans Life Cycle

Only about 100 life cycles have been resolved and it is suspected that there may be some exclusively terrestrial.[11] The mechanism of infection occurs through valve spores that have many forms, but their main morphology is the same: one or two sporoplasts, which are the real infectious agent, surrounded by a layer of attenuated cells called valve cells, which can secrete a layer protective coating and form float appendages. Integrated into the layer of valve cells are two to four specialized capsulogenic cells (in a few cases, one or even 15), each carrying a polar capsule containing coiled polar filaments, an extrudable organelle used for recognition, contact and infiltration.[12] Myxospores are ingested by annelids, in which the polar filaments extrude to anchor the spore to the gut epithelium. Opening of the shell valves allows the sporoplasms to penetrate into the epithelium. Subsequently, the parasite undergoes reproduction and development in the gut tissue, and finally produces usually eight actinosporean spore stages (actinospores) within a pansporocyst. After mature actinospores are released from their hosts they float in the water column.[13] Upon contact with skin or gills of fish, sporoplasms penetrate through the epithelium, followed by development of the myxosporean stage. Myxosporean trophozoites are characterized by cell-in-cell state, where the secondary (daughter) cells develop in the mother (primary) cells. The presporogonic stages multiply, migrate via nervous or circulatory systems, and develop into sporogonic stages. At the final site of infection, they produce mature spores within mono- or di-sporic pseudoplasmodia, or poly-sporic plasmodia.[14]

Relationships between myxosporeans and their hosts are often highly evolved and do not usually result in severe diseases of the natural host. Infection in fish hosts can be extremely long-lasting, potentially persisting for the lifetime of the host. However, an increasing number of myxosporeans have become commercially important pathogens of fish, largely as a result of aquaculture bringing new species into contact with myxosporeans to which they had not been previously exposed, and to which they are highly susceptible. The economic impact of such parasites can be severe, especially where prevalence rates are high; they may also have a severe impact on wild fish stocks.

The economically most significant diseases worldwide caused by myxosporeas in cultured fishes are proliferative kidney disease (PKD) caused by the malacosporean T. bryosalmonae, and whirling disease, caused by a myxosporean M. cerebralis; both diseases affect salmon. Enteromyxosis is caused by E. leei in cultured marine sparids, while proliferative gill disease (or “hamburger disease”) is caused by H. ictaluri in catfish and S. renicola infections occur in common carp.

Anatomy

Myxozoans are very small animals, typically 10–300 μm in length.[15]

Like other cnidarians they possess cnidocysts, which were referred to as "polar capsules" before the discovery that myxozoans are cnidarians. These cnidocysts fire tubules as in other cnidarians; some inject substances into the host. However, the tubules lack hooks or barbs, and in some species are more elastic than in other cnidarians.

Myxozoans have secondarily lost epithelial structures, a nervous system, gut, and cilia. Most lack muscles, though these are retained in some members of malacosporea. Those who have lost their muscles move around inside the host using other forms of locomotion, such as the use of filopodia, spore valve contractions, amoeboid movements, and rapidly creating and reabsorbing folds on the cell membrane.[16] Myxozoans do not undergo embryogenesis during development and have lost true gametes.[3] Instead, they reproduce via multicellular spores. These spores contain the polar capsules, which are not typically present in somatic cells. Centrioles do not participate in the nuclear division of myxozoans. Cell division by binary fission is rare, and cells divide instead via endogeny.[15]

In 2020, the myxozoan Henneguya salminicola was found to lack a mitochondrial genome, and thus be incapable of aerobic respiration; it was the first animal to be positively identified as such. Its actual metabolism is currently unknown.[17]

Phylogenetics

Myxozoans were originally considered to be protozoans,[18] and were included among other non-motile forms in the group Sporozoa.[19] As their distinct nature became clear through 18S ribosomal DNA (rDNA) sequencing, they were relocated in the metazoa. Detailed classification within the metazoa was however long hindered by conflicting rDNA evidence: although 18S rDNA suggested an affinity with Cnidaria,[20] other rDNA sampled,[21][22] and the HOX genes of two species,[23] were more similar to those of the Bilateria.

The discovery that Buddenbrockia plumatellae, a worm-like parasite of bryozoans up to 2 mm in length, is a myxozoan[21] initially appeared to strengthen the case for a bilaterian origin, as the body plan is superficially similar. Nevertheless, closer examination reveals that Buddenbrockia's longitudinal symmetry is not twofold, but fourfold, casting doubt on this hypothesis.

Further testing resolved the genetic conundrum by sourcing the first three previously identified discrepant HOX genes (Myx1-3) to the bryozoan Cristatella mucedo and the fourth (Myx4) to northern pike, the respective hosts of the two corresponding Myxozoa samples.[24] This explained the confusion: the original experiments had used samples contaminated by tissue from host organisms, leading to false positives for a position among the Bilateria. More careful cloning of 50 coding genes from Buddenbrockia firmly established the clade as severely modified members of the phylum Cnidaria, with medusozoans as their closest relatives.[24] Similarities between myxozoan polar capsules and cnidarian nematocysts had been drawn for a long time, but were generally assumed to be the result of convergent evolution.

Taxonomists now recognize the outdated subgroup Actinosporea as a life-cycle phase of Myxosporea.[25]

Molecular clocks suggest that myxozoans and their closest relatives, the polypodiozoa, shared their last common ancestor with medusazoans about 600 million years ago, during the Ediacaran period.[3]

Taxonomy

Myxozoan taxonomy has undergone great and important changes in its levels of generic, family and suborder classification. Fiala et al. (2015) proposed a new classification based on spores.[26]

Phylum: Cnidaria
Subphylum: Myxozoa[26]
Class: Malacosporea Class: Myxosporea (sequel)
Order: Malacovalvulida Order: Bivalvulida
Family: Saccosporidae Family: Myxobilatidae
Genus: Buddenbrockia, Tetracapsuloides Genus: Myxobilatus, Acauda, Hoferellus
Class: Myxosporea Family: Chloromyxidae
Order: Bivalvulida Genus: Chloromyxum, Caudomyxum, Agarella
Suborder: Variisporina Family: Coccomyxidae
Family: Sphaeromyxidae Genus: Coccomyxa, Auerbachia, Globospora
Genus: Sphaeromyxa Family: Alatosporidae
Family: Myxidiidae Genus: Alatospora, Pseudalatospora, Renispora
Genus: Myxidium, Zschokkella, Enteromyxum, Sigmomyxa, Soricimyxum, Cystodiscus Family: Parvicapsulidae
Family: Ortholineidae Genus: Parvicapsula, Neoparvicapsula, Gadimyxa
Genus: Ortholinea, Neomyxobolus, Cardimyxobolus, Triangula, Kentmoseria Suborder: Platysporina
Family: Sinuolineidae Family: Myxobolidae
Genus: Sinuolinea, Myxodavisia, Myxoproteus, Bipteria, Paramyxoproteus, Neobipteria, Schulmania, Noblea, Latyspora Genus: Myxobolus, Spirosuturia, Unicauda, Dicauda, Phlogospora, Laterocaudata, Henneguya, Hennegoides, Tetrauronema, Thelohanellus, Neothelohanellus, Neohenneguya, Trigonosporus
Family: Fabesporidae Order: Multivalvulida
Genus: Fabespora Family: Trilosporidae
Family: Ceratomyxidae Genus: Trilospora, Unicapsula
Genus: Ceratomyxa, Meglitschia, Ellipsomyxa, Ceratonova Family: Kudoidae
Family: Sphaerosporidae Genus: Kudoa
Genus: Sphaerospora, Wardia, Palliatus Family: Spinavaculidae
Genus: Octospina
*Incertae sedis in Multivalvulida: Trilosporoides
 
  Phylum:  
  Cnidaria  
  Subphylum:  
  Myxozoa  
[26]
  Class:  
  Malacosporea  
Order:
   Malacovalvulida  
Family:
   Saccosporidae  

Genus: Buddenbrockia, Tetracapsuloides

  Class:  
  Myxosporea  
Order:
   Bivalvulida  
Suborder:
   Variisporina  
Family:
   Sphaeromyxidae  

Genus: Sphaeromyxa

Family:
   Myxidiidae  

Genus:
Myxidium, Zschokkella, Enteromyxum, Sigmomyxa, Soricimyxum, Cystodiscus

Family:
   Ortholineidae  

Genus:
Ortholinea, Neomyxobolus, Cardimyxobolus, Triangula, Kentmoseria

Family:
   Sinuolineidae  

Genus:
Sinuolinea, Myxodavisia, Myxoproteus, Bipteria, Paramyxoproteus, Neobipteria, Schulmania, Noblea, Latyspora

Family:
   Fabesporidae  

Genus: Fabespora

Family:
   Ceratomyxidae  

Genus:
Ceratomyxa, Meglitschia, Ellipsomyxa, Ceratonova

Family:
   Sphaerosporidae  

Genus:
Sphaerospora, Wardia, Palliatus

Family:
   Myxobilatidae  

Genus:
Myxobilatus, Acauda, Hoferellus

Family:
   Chloromyxidae  

Genus:
Chloromyxum, Caudomyxum, Agarella

Family:
   Coccomyxidae  

Genus:
Coccomyxa, Auerbachia, Globospora

Family:
   Alatosporidae  

Genus:
Alatospora, Pseudalatospora, Renispora

Family:
   Parvicapsulidae  

Genus:
Parvicapsula, Neoparvicapsula, Gadimyxa

Suborder:
   Platysporina  
Family:
   Myxobolidae  

Genus:
Myxobolus, Spirosuturia, Unicauda, Dicauda, Phlogospora, Laterocaudata, Henneguya, Hennegoides, Tetrauronema, Thelohanellus, Neothelohanellus, Neohenneguya, Trigonosporus

Order:
   Multivalvulida  
Family:
   Trilosporidae  

Genus: Trilospora, Unicapsula

Family:
   Kudoidae  

Genus: Kudoa

Family:
   Spinavaculidae  

Genus: Octospina

  incertae sedis:       Trilosporoides  

     other Cnidarians     

    . . .   
 

References

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  2. ^ ζῷον. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project
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  13. ^ el Matbouli, M.; Hoffmann, R.W. (1998). "Light and electron microscopic studies on the chronological development of Myxobolus cerebralis to the actinosporean stage in Tubifex tubifex". International Journal for Parasitology. 28 (1): 195–217. doi:10.1016/s0020-7519(97)00176-8. PMID 9504346.
  14. ^ el Matbouli, M.; Hoffmann, R.W.; Mandok, C. (1995). "Light and electron microscopic observations on the route of the triactinomyxon-sporoplasm of Myxobolus cerebralis from epidermis into rainbow trout (Oncorhynchus mykiss) cartilage". Journal of Fish Biology. 46 (6): 919–935. doi:10.1111/j.1095-8649.1995.tb01397.x.
  15. ^ a b Canning, Elizabeth U.; Okamura, Beth (1 January 2003). "Biodiversity and Evolution of the Myxozoa". Advances in Parasitology. Vol. 56. Academic Press. pp. 43–131. doi:10.1016/S0065-308X(03)56002-X. ISBN 978-0-12-031756-1. PMID 14710996.
  16. ^ New cell motility model observed in parasitic cnidarian Sphaerospora molnari (Myxozoa:Myxosporea) blood stages in fish
  17. ^ Yahalomi, Dayana; Atkinson, Stephen D.; Neuhof, Moran; Chang, E. Sally; Philippe, Hervé; Cartwright, Paulyn; Bartholomew, Jerri L.; Huchon, Dorothée (10 March 2020). "A cnidarian parasite of salmon (Myxozoa: Henneguya) lacks a mitochondrial genome". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. 117 (10): 5358–5363. Bibcode:2020PNAS..117.5358Y. doi:10.1073/pnas.1909907117. ISSN 0027-8424. PMC 7071853. PMID 32094163.
  18. ^ Štolc, A. (1899). "Actinomyxidies, nouveau groupe de Mesozoaires parent des Myxosporidies". Bull. Int. l'Acad. Sci. Bohème. 12: 1–12.
  19. ^ .
  20. ^ Smothers, J.F.; et al. (September 1994). "Molecular evidence that the myxozoan protists are metazoans". Science. 265 (5179): 1719–1721. Bibcode:1994Sci...265.1719S. doi:10.1126/science.8085160. PMID 8085160.
  21. ^ a b A.S. Monteiro; et al. (1 June 2002). "Orphan worm finds a home: Buddenbrockia is a Myxozoan". Mol. Biol. Evol. 19 (6): 968–71. doi:10.1093/oxfordjournals.molbev.a004155. PMID 12032254.
  22. ^ J. Zrzavy & V. Hypsa (April 2003). "Myxozoa, Polypodium, and the origin of the Bilateria: The phylogenetic position of "Endocnidozoa" in light of the rediscovery of Buddenbrockia". Cladistics. 19 (2): 164–169. Bibcode:2002clad.book.....S. doi:10.1111/j.1096-0031.2003.tb00305.x. S2CID 221583517.
  23. ^ C. L. Anderson, E. U. Canning & B. Okamura (March 1999). "A triploblast origin for Myxozoa?". Nature. 392 (6674): 346–347. Bibcode:1998Natur.392..346A. doi:10.1038/32801. PMID 9537319. S2CID 4426181.
  24. ^ a b E. Jímenez-Guri; et al. (July 2007). "Buddenbrockia is a cnidarian worm". Science. 317 (116): 116–118. Bibcode:2007Sci...317..116J. doi:10.1126/science.1142024. PMID 17615357. S2CID 5170702.
  25. ^ Kent M. L.; Margolis L.; Corliss J.O. (1994). "The demise of a class of protists: taxonomic and nomenclatural revisions proposed for the protist phylum Myxozoa Grasse, 1970". Canadian Journal of Zoology. 72 (5): 932–937. doi:10.1139/z94-126.
  26. ^ a b c Fiala, Ivan; Bartošová-Sojková, Pavla; Whipps, Christopher M. (2015). "Classification and Phylogenetics of Myxozoa". In Okamura, Beth; Gruhl, Alexander; Bartholomew, Jerri L. (eds.). Myxozoan Evolution, Ecology, and Development. Springer International Publishing. pp. 85–110. doi:10.1007/978-3-319-14753-6_5. ISBN 978-3-319-14752-9.

External links

  • "Myxozoa". Tree of Life.
  • "Myxozoan researchers network" (main page).

myxozoa, etymology, greek, μύξα, myxa, slime, mucus, thematic, vowel, ζῷον, zoon, animal, subphylum, aquatic, cnidarian, animals, obligate, parasites, contains, smallest, animals, ever, known, have, lived, over, species, have, been, described, some, estimates,. Myxozoa etymology Greek my3a myxa slime or mucus 1 thematic vowel o zῷon zoon animal 2 is a subphylum of aquatic cnidarian animals all obligate parasites It contains the smallest animals ever known to have lived Over 2 180 species have been described and some estimates have suggested at least 30 000 undiscovered species 3 Many have a two host lifecycle involving a fish and an annelid worm or a bryozoan The average size of a myxosporean spore usually ranges from 10 mm to 20 mm 4 whereas that of a malacosporean a subclade of the Myxozoa spore can be up to 2 mm Myxozoans can live in both freshwater and marine habitats MyxozoaTriactinomyxon stage of Myxobolus cerebralisScientific classificationKingdom AnimaliaPhylum CnidariaSubphylum MyxozoaGrasse 1970ClassesMyxosporea MalacosporeaMyxozoans are highly derived cnidarians that have undergone dramatic evolution from a free swimming self sufficient jellyfish like creature into their current form of obligate parasites composed of very few cells sometimes only a single cell As myxozoans evolved into microscopic parasites they lost many genes responsible for multicellular development coordination cell cell communication and even in some cases aerobic respiration The genomes of some myxozoans are now among the smallest genomes of any known animal species 5 6 Contents 1 Life cycle and pathology 2 Anatomy 3 Phylogenetics 4 Taxonomy 5 References 6 External linksLife cycle and pathology EditMyxozoans are endoparasitic animals exhibiting complex life cycles that in most of the documented cases involve an intermediate host usually a fish but in rare cases amphibians 7 reptiles 7 birds 8 and mammals 9 10 and a definitive host usually an annelid or an ectoproct Myxozoans Life Cycle Only about 100 life cycles have been resolved and it is suspected that there may be some exclusively terrestrial 11 The mechanism of infection occurs through valve spores that have many forms but their main morphology is the same one or two sporoplasts which are the real infectious agent surrounded by a layer of attenuated cells called valve cells which can secrete a layer protective coating and form float appendages Integrated into the layer of valve cells are two to four specialized capsulogenic cells in a few cases one or even 15 each carrying a polar capsule containing coiled polar filaments an extrudable organelle used for recognition contact and infiltration 12 Myxospores are ingested by annelids in which the polar filaments extrude to anchor the spore to the gut epithelium Opening of the shell valves allows the sporoplasms to penetrate into the epithelium Subsequently the parasite undergoes reproduction and development in the gut tissue and finally produces usually eight actinosporean spore stages actinospores within a pansporocyst After mature actinospores are released from their hosts they float in the water column 13 Upon contact with skin or gills of fish sporoplasms penetrate through the epithelium followed by development of the myxosporean stage Myxosporean trophozoites are characterized by cell in cell state where the secondary daughter cells develop in the mother primary cells The presporogonic stages multiply migrate via nervous or circulatory systems and develop into sporogonic stages At the final site of infection they produce mature spores within mono or di sporic pseudoplasmodia or poly sporic plasmodia 14 Relationships between myxosporeans and their hosts are often highly evolved and do not usually result in severe diseases of the natural host Infection in fish hosts can be extremely long lasting potentially persisting for the lifetime of the host However an increasing number of myxosporeans have become commercially important pathogens of fish largely as a result of aquaculture bringing new species into contact with myxosporeans to which they had not been previously exposed and to which they are highly susceptible The economic impact of such parasites can be severe especially where prevalence rates are high they may also have a severe impact on wild fish stocks The economically most significant diseases worldwide caused by myxosporeas in cultured fishes are proliferative kidney disease PKD caused by the malacosporean T bryosalmonae and whirling disease caused by a myxosporean M cerebralis both diseases affect salmon Enteromyxosis is caused by E leei in cultured marine sparids while proliferative gill disease or hamburger disease is caused by H ictaluri in catfish and S renicola infections occur in common carp Anatomy EditMyxozoans are very small animals typically 10 300 mm in length 15 Like other cnidarians they possess cnidocysts which were referred to as polar capsules before the discovery that myxozoans are cnidarians These cnidocysts fire tubules as in other cnidarians some inject substances into the host However the tubules lack hooks or barbs and in some species are more elastic than in other cnidarians Myxozoans have secondarily lost epithelial structures a nervous system gut and cilia Most lack muscles though these are retained in some members of malacosporea Those who have lost their muscles move around inside the host using other forms of locomotion such as the use of filopodia spore valve contractions amoeboid movements and rapidly creating and reabsorbing folds on the cell membrane 16 Myxozoans do not undergo embryogenesis during development and have lost true gametes 3 Instead they reproduce via multicellular spores These spores contain the polar capsules which are not typically present in somatic cells Centrioles do not participate in the nuclear division of myxozoans Cell division by binary fission is rare and cells divide instead via endogeny 15 In 2020 the myxozoan Henneguya salminicola was found to lack a mitochondrial genome and thus be incapable of aerobic respiration it was the first animal to be positively identified as such Its actual metabolism is currently unknown 17 Phylogenetics EditMyxozoans were originally considered to be protozoans 18 and were included among other non motile forms in the group Sporozoa 19 As their distinct nature became clear through 18S ribosomal DNA rDNA sequencing they were relocated in the metazoa Detailed classification within the metazoa was however long hindered by conflicting rDNA evidence although 18S rDNA suggested an affinity with Cnidaria 20 other rDNA sampled 21 22 and the HOX genes of two species 23 were more similar to those of the Bilateria The discovery that Buddenbrockia plumatellae a worm like parasite of bryozoans up to 2 mm in length is a myxozoan 21 initially appeared to strengthen the case for a bilaterian origin as the body plan is superficially similar Nevertheless closer examination reveals that Buddenbrockia s longitudinal symmetry is not twofold but fourfold casting doubt on this hypothesis Further testing resolved the genetic conundrum by sourcing the first three previously identified discrepant HOX genes Myx1 3 to the bryozoan Cristatella mucedo and the fourth Myx4 to northern pike the respective hosts of the two corresponding Myxozoa samples 24 This explained the confusion the original experiments had used samples contaminated by tissue from host organisms leading to false positives for a position among the Bilateria More careful cloning of 50 coding genes from Buddenbrockia firmly established the clade as severely modified members of the phylum Cnidaria with medusozoans as their closest relatives 24 Similarities between myxozoan polar capsules and cnidarian nematocysts had been drawn for a long time but were generally assumed to be the result of convergent evolution Taxonomists now recognize the outdated subgroup Actinosporea as a life cycle phase of Myxosporea 25 Molecular clocks suggest that myxozoans and their closest relatives the polypodiozoa shared their last common ancestor with medusazoans about 600 million years ago during the Ediacaran period 3 Taxonomy EditMyxozoan taxonomy has undergone great and important changes in its levels of generic family and suborder classification Fiala et al 2015 proposed a new classification based on spores 26 Phylum CnidariaSubphylum Myxozoa 26 Class Malacosporea Class Myxosporea sequel Order Malacovalvulida Order BivalvulidaFamily Saccosporidae Family MyxobilatidaeGenus Buddenbrockia Tetracapsuloides Genus Myxobilatus Acauda HoferellusClass Myxosporea Family ChloromyxidaeOrder Bivalvulida Genus Chloromyxum Caudomyxum AgarellaSuborder Variisporina Family CoccomyxidaeFamily Sphaeromyxidae Genus Coccomyxa Auerbachia GlobosporaGenus Sphaeromyxa Family AlatosporidaeFamily Myxidiidae Genus Alatospora Pseudalatospora RenisporaGenus Myxidium Zschokkella Enteromyxum Sigmomyxa Soricimyxum Cystodiscus Family ParvicapsulidaeFamily Ortholineidae Genus Parvicapsula Neoparvicapsula GadimyxaGenus Ortholinea Neomyxobolus Cardimyxobolus Triangula Kentmoseria Suborder PlatysporinaFamily Sinuolineidae Family MyxobolidaeGenus Sinuolinea Myxodavisia Myxoproteus Bipteria Paramyxoproteus Neobipteria Schulmania Noblea Latyspora Genus Myxobolus Spirosuturia Unicauda Dicauda Phlogospora Laterocaudata Henneguya Hennegoides Tetrauronema Thelohanellus Neothelohanellus Neohenneguya TrigonosporusFamily Fabesporidae Order MultivalvulidaGenus Fabespora Family TrilosporidaeFamily Ceratomyxidae Genus Trilospora UnicapsulaGenus Ceratomyxa Meglitschia Ellipsomyxa Ceratonova Family KudoidaeFamily Sphaerosporidae Genus KudoaGenus Sphaerospora Wardia Palliatus Family SpinavaculidaeGenus Octospina Incertae sedis in Multivalvulida Trilosporoides Phylum Cnidaria Subphylum Myxozoa 26 Class Malacosporea Order Malacovalvulida Family Saccosporidae Genus Buddenbrockia Tetracapsuloides Class Myxosporea Order Bivalvulida Suborder Variisporina Family Sphaeromyxidae Genus SphaeromyxaFamily Myxidiidae Genus Myxidium Zschokkella Enteromyxum Sigmomyxa Soricimyxum CystodiscusFamily Ortholineidae Genus Ortholinea Neomyxobolus Cardimyxobolus Triangula KentmoseriaFamily Sinuolineidae Genus Sinuolinea Myxodavisia Myxoproteus Bipteria Paramyxoproteus Neobipteria Schulmania Noblea LatysporaFamily Fabesporidae Genus FabesporaFamily Ceratomyxidae Genus Ceratomyxa Meglitschia Ellipsomyxa CeratonovaFamily Sphaerosporidae Genus Sphaerospora Wardia PalliatusFamily Myxobilatidae Genus Myxobilatus Acauda HoferellusFamily Chloromyxidae Genus Chloromyxum Caudomyxum AgarellaFamily Coccomyxidae Genus Coccomyxa Auerbachia GlobosporaFamily Alatosporidae Genus Alatospora Pseudalatospora RenisporaFamily Parvicapsulidae Genus Parvicapsula Neoparvicapsula GadimyxaSuborder Platysporina Family Myxobolidae Genus Myxobolus Spirosuturia Unicauda Dicauda Phlogospora Laterocaudata Henneguya Hennegoides Tetrauronema Thelohanellus Neothelohanellus Neohenneguya TrigonosporusOrder Multivalvulida Family Trilosporidae Genus Trilospora UnicapsulaFamily Kudoidae Genus KudoaFamily Spinavaculidae Genus Octospina incertae sedis Trilosporoides other Cnidarians References Edit my3a Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project zῷon Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project a b c Atkinson Stephen D Bartholomew Jerri L Lotan Tamar 1 August 2018 Myxozoans Ancient metazoan parasites find a home in phylum Cnidaria Zoology 129 66 68 doi 10 1016 j zool 2018 06 005 ISSN 0944 2006 PMID 30170750 S2CID 52141614 Fiala Ivan 10 July 2008 Myxozoa tolweb org under construction The Tree of Life Web Project Chang E Sally Neuhof Moran Rubinstein Nimrod D Diamant Arik Philippe Herve Huchon Dorothee Cartwright Paulyn 1 December 2015 Genomic insights into the evolutionary origin of Myxozoa within Cnidaria Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 112 48 14912 14917 Bibcode 2015PNAS 11214912C doi 10 1073 pnas 1511468112 ISSN 1091 6490 PMC 4672818 PMID 26627241 Yahalomi D Atkinson S D Neuhof M Chang E S Philippe H Cartwright P Bartholomew J L Huchon D 24 February 2020 A cnidarian parasite of salmon Myxozoa Henneguya lacks a mitochondrial genome Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 10 5358 5363 Bibcode 2020PNAS 117 5358Y doi 10 1073 pnas 1909907117 PMC 7071853 PMID 32094163 a b Eiras Jorge C 2005 An overview on the myxosporean parasites in amphibians and reptiles PDF Acta Parasitologica 50 4 267 275 ISSN 1230 2821 Bartholomew J L Atkinson S D Hallett S L Lowenstine L J Garner M M Gardiner C H Rideout B A Keel M K Brown J D 2008 Myxozoan parasitism in waterfowl International Journal for Parasitology 38 10 1199 1207 doi 10 1016 j ijpara 2008 01 008 PMID 18342316 Prunescu Carol Constantin Prunescu Paula Lom Jiri 2007 The first finding of myxosporean development from plasmodia to spores in terrestrial mammals Soricimyxum fegati gen et sp n Myxozoa from Sorex araneus Soricomorpha PDF Folia Parasitologica 54 3 159 164 doi 10 14411 fp 2007 022 PMID 19245186 S2CID 45278079 Szekely Csaba Cech Gabor Atkinson Stephen D Kalman Molnar Egyed Laszlo Gubanyi Andras 2015 A novel myxozoan parasite of terrestrial mammals Description of Soricimyxum minuti sp n Myxosporea in pygmy shrew Sorex minutus from Hungary PDF Folia Parasitologica 62 1 45 49 doi 10 14411 fp 2015 045 PMID 26370293 Hallett Sascha L Bartholomew Jerri L Atkinson Stephen D Szekely Csaba 2015 Myxozoans exploiting homeotherms In Okamura B Gruhl A Bartholomew J L eds Myxozoan Evolution Ecology and Development Springer International Publishing pp 125 138 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 14753 6 7 ISBN 978 3 319 14752 9 S2CID 83229156 Gruhl Alexander 2015 Chapter 7 Myxozoa In Wanninger Andreas ed Evolutionary developmental biology of invertebrates Vol 1 Introduction non bilateria acoelomorpha xenoturbellida chaetognatha Springer Verlag Wien pp 165 177 doi 10 1007 978 3 7091 1862 7 7 ISBN 978 3 7091 1861 0 el Matbouli M Hoffmann R W 1998 Light and electron microscopic studies on the chronological development of Myxobolus cerebralis to the actinosporean stage in Tubifex tubifex International Journal for Parasitology 28 1 195 217 doi 10 1016 s0020 7519 97 00176 8 PMID 9504346 el Matbouli M Hoffmann R W Mandok C 1995 Light and electron microscopic observations on the route of the triactinomyxon sporoplasm of Myxobolus cerebralis from epidermis into rainbow trout Oncorhynchus mykiss cartilage Journal of Fish Biology 46 6 919 935 doi 10 1111 j 1095 8649 1995 tb01397 x a b Canning Elizabeth U Okamura Beth 1 January 2003 Biodiversity and Evolution of the Myxozoa Advances in Parasitology Vol 56 Academic Press pp 43 131 doi 10 1016 S0065 308X 03 56002 X ISBN 978 0 12 031756 1 PMID 14710996 New cell motility model observed in parasitic cnidarian Sphaerospora molnari Myxozoa Myxosporea blood stages in fish Yahalomi Dayana Atkinson Stephen D Neuhof Moran Chang E Sally Philippe Herve Cartwright Paulyn Bartholomew Jerri L Huchon Dorothee 10 March 2020 A cnidarian parasite of salmon Myxozoa Henneguya lacks a mitochondrial genome Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 117 10 5358 5363 Bibcode 2020PNAS 117 5358Y doi 10 1073 pnas 1909907117 ISSN 0027 8424 PMC 7071853 PMID 32094163 Stolc A 1899 Actinomyxidies nouveau groupe de Mesozoaires parent des Myxosporidies Bull Int l Acad Sci Boheme 12 1 12 Edwin Lanfranco 2007 A phylogenetic classification of organisms other than animals Smothers J F et al September 1994 Molecular evidence that the myxozoan protists are metazoans Science 265 5179 1719 1721 Bibcode 1994Sci 265 1719S doi 10 1126 science 8085160 PMID 8085160 a b A S Monteiro et al 1 June 2002 Orphan worm finds a home Buddenbrockia is a Myxozoan Mol Biol Evol 19 6 968 71 doi 10 1093 oxfordjournals molbev a004155 PMID 12032254 J Zrzavy amp V Hypsa April 2003 Myxozoa Polypodium and the origin of the Bilateria The phylogenetic position of Endocnidozoa in light of the rediscovery of Buddenbrockia Cladistics 19 2 164 169 Bibcode 2002clad book S doi 10 1111 j 1096 0031 2003 tb00305 x S2CID 221583517 C L Anderson E U Canning amp B Okamura March 1999 A triploblast origin for Myxozoa Nature 392 6674 346 347 Bibcode 1998Natur 392 346A doi 10 1038 32801 PMID 9537319 S2CID 4426181 a b E Jimenez Guri et al July 2007 Buddenbrockia is a cnidarian worm Science 317 116 116 118 Bibcode 2007Sci 317 116J doi 10 1126 science 1142024 PMID 17615357 S2CID 5170702 Kent M L Margolis L Corliss J O 1994 The demise of a class of protists taxonomic and nomenclatural revisions proposed for the protist phylum Myxozoa Grasse 1970 Canadian Journal of Zoology 72 5 932 937 doi 10 1139 z94 126 a b c Fiala Ivan Bartosova Sojkova Pavla Whipps Christopher M 2015 Classification and Phylogenetics of Myxozoa In Okamura Beth Gruhl Alexander Bartholomew Jerri L eds Myxozoan Evolution Ecology and Development Springer International Publishing pp 85 110 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 14753 6 5 ISBN 978 3 319 14752 9 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Myxozoa Myxozoa Tree of Life Myxozoan researchers network main page Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Myxozoa amp oldid 1127428916, wikipedia, wiki, book, 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