4.0 Article

New Approach to the Ultrastructure of the Capillitium in the Order Trichiales (Myxomycetes, Amoebozoa) and its Phylogenetic Implications

Journal

PROTIST
Volume 172, Issue 2, Pages -

Publisher

ELSEVIER GMBH
DOI: 10.1016/j.protis.2021.125805

Keywords

Amoebozoa; microscopy; SEM; systematics; TEM; phylogeny

Categories

Funding

  1. Spanish Government [CGL2014-52584-P, PGC2018-094660B-I00]
  2. Spanish National Ph.D. grant [BES-2015-474 072763]

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By studying the capillitium of 25 species representing nine Trichiales genera, we found higher diversity in the capillitium than previously recognized within this order. We distinguished and described five capillitium types and two subtypes based on the presence or absence of a lumen and the wall ultrastructure. These types followed the evolutionary history reported in recent phylogenies, although not all of them defined monophyletic groups.
Myxomycetes constitute one of the major lineages within the supergroup Amoebozoa. At the end of their life cycles, most myxomycetes produce spore-bearing fruiting bodies, in which additional structures develop, like the capillitium, a system of sterile filaments intermingled with the spores. The capillitium is a relevant structure in the taxonomy of the order Trichiales, the target group in this study. However, the introduction of molecular phylogenies in Myxomycetes systematics is challenging our comprehension of this structure. We studied the capillitium of 25 species representing nine Trichiales genera, with both scanning and transmission electron microscopy. In this order, the capillitium showed higher diversity than so far recognized. Thus, we distinguished and described five capillitium types and two subtypes based on the presence or absence of a lumen and the wall ultrastructure. These types followed the evolutionary history reported in recent phylogenies, although not all of them defined monophyletic groups. Besides, the spiral ornamentation, which most taxonomists considered to have appeared once, occurred in three different capillitium types. The ultrastructural approaches in Myxomycetes systematics enable the reconsideration of their morphological features in the new phylogenetic scenario. (C) 2021 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.

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