4.0 Article

Ultrastructure, Life Cycle and Molecular Phylogenetic Position of a Novel Marine Sand-Dwelling Cercozoan: Clautriavia biflagellata n. sp.

Journal

PROTIST
Volume 161, Issue 1, Pages 133-147

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.protis.2009.09.001

Keywords

Auranticordis; Cercozoa; comparative ultrastructure; marine interstitial flagellates; phylogenetic analysis; Protaspis; SSU rDNA

Categories

Funding

  1. Cooperative Research Network (CRN)
  2. Government of Thailand
  3. National Science and Engineering Research Council of Canada [NSERC 283091-04]
  4. Canadian Institute for Advanced Research, Program in Integrated Microbial Biodiversity

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Clautriavia is a genus of uncertain taxonomic affinity that was initially described as gliding cells with one prominent trailing flagellum and a mid-ventral groove. the genus has been classified either with euglenids on the basis of similar paramylon-like granules or with cercozoans, specifically Protaspis spp., on the basis of general similarities in cell morphology and behavior. We isolated and cultivated a novel species of Clautriavia, namely C. biflagellata n. sp., from marine sand samples collected from the west coast of Vancouver is land, Canada and characterized this isolate with high resolution microscopy (LM, SEM, and TEM) and small subunit (SSU) rDNA sequence. the gliding cells of C. biflagellata n. sp. were round to oval in outline (12-20 mu m wide and 15-20 mu m long), dorsoventrally flattened, and capable of engulfing other eukaryotic cells (e. g., diatoms). the cells possessed two recurrent flagella of unequal length that emerged from a subapical pit within a ventral depression: the longer prominent flagellum was about 2X the cell length; the shorter flagellum was inconspicuous and was confined to the ventral depression. Molecular phylogenetic analyses demonstrated that C. biflagellata n. sp. branched strongly within the Cercozoa, but was only distantly related to Protaspis spp. Instead, C. biflagellata n. sp. branched closely with the recently established Auranticordida clade, consisting of Auranticordis quadriverberis and Pseudopirsonia mucosa. This position was concordant with our ultrastructural data, which demonstrated several features shared by A. quadriverberis and C. biflagellata n. sp. that are not present in Protaspis spp.: (1) a dense distribution of pores on the cell surface; (2) a distinct layer of muciferous bodies immediately beneath the cell surface; (3) a robust microtubular root attached to the anterior end of the nucleus; (4) the absence of a thick cell covering; and (5) the absence of conspicuously condensed chromosomes. (C) 2009 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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