A Deeply Branching Lineage in Heterolobosea (Discoba) With Multiflagellated and Multigrooved Life Stages
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Prokina, Kristina I.; Yubuki, Naoji; Galindo, Luis Javier; Torruella, Guifré; Inagaki, Yuji; Iwamoto, Koji; López-García, Purificación; Moreira, DavidEditorial
Wiley Periodicals LLC
Materia
Electron microscopy Heterolobosea Karyomastigont
Fecha
2025-08-06Referencia bibliográfica
Prokina, K. I., N. Yubuki, L. J. Galindo, et al. 2025. “ A Deeply Branching Lineage in Heterolobosea (Discoba) With Multiflagellated and Multigrooved Life Stages.” Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology 72, no. 5: e70037. https://doi.org/10.1111/jeu.70037
Patrocinador
European Research Council (Grant Numbers: 787904, 101141745); Ramón y Cajal Programme (Grant Number: RYC2022-035282-I)Resumen
Several distantly related, deep-branching lineages within the eukaryotic tree of life share what is known as the “typical excavate”
morphology. This cell architecture includes a suspension-feeding ventral groove, supported by complex and specific structures
of the cytoskeleton, and a vane-bearing posterior flagellum. Within Discoba, such characteristics were found only in the deepest
branch, Jakobida, also famous for having the most gene-rich and bacterial-like mitogenomes. Some members of the discoban
lineage Heterolobosea also possess a ventral groove. However, they lost many other typical excavate characteristics, including
the flagellar vane and some flagellar root elements. We have established a clonal culture of a free-living freshwater flagellate
from Malaysia, strain NY0229, described here under the provisional name Multisulcus malaysiensis nom. prov. Electron microscopy observations show a conspicuous ventral groove reinforced with microtubules of the flagellar apparatus and a vane on the
posterior flagellum. Strain NY0229 has typical excavate biflagellated forms but also exhibits very atypical multiflagellated and
multigrooved forms. The kinetid consists of two orthogonally oriented kinetosomes; both flagella of biflagellate cells display
proximal and distal projections. Molecular phylogenetic analyses support a deep-branching position of the new strain within
Heterolobosea, as the sister lineage to all previously known Eutetramitia.





