4.1 Article

Molecular taxonomy of the suborder Bodonina (order Kinetoplastida), including the important fish parasite, Ichthyobodo necator

Journal

JOURNAL OF EUKARYOTIC MICROBIOLOGY
Volume 49, Issue 2, Pages 119-128

Publisher

WILEY-BLACKWELL
DOI: 10.1111/j.1550-7408.2002.tb00354.x

Keywords

Bodo; Cryptobia; morphology; phylogeny; small-subunit ribosomal RNA; Trypanosoma; Trypanosomatina

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Ichthyoboda necator is an important fish ectoparasite with a broad host and ecological range. A novel method, involving the use of an anesthetic, allowed the collection of large numbers of parasites from the skin and gills of hybrid striped bass (Morone saxatilis male X M. chrysops female). Genomic DNA from these samples was used to amplify and clone the 18S rRNA gene. The 18S rRNA gene was similarly cloned from Bodo caudatus, Bodo edax, Bodo saltans, an unidentified Bodo species, and Dimastigella trypaniformis. The resulting sequences were aligned with other representative kinetoplastid species using pileup and similarities in secondary structure. Phylogenetic relationships within the suborder Bodonina and representatives of the suborder Trypanosomatina were determined using maximum-likelihood statistics. The phylogenetic analyses strongly supported the order Kinetoplastida as a monophyletic assemblage consisting of at least two major lineages. One lineage consisted exclusively of I. necator, indicating that it may represent a new suborder. The second lineage consisted of all other kinetoplastid species, This second lineage appeared to contain at least 8 bodonine sublineages, none of which correlated With currently recognized families, For three sublineages, there was a close correspondence between the 18S phylogeny and the classical taxonomy of Dimastigella, Rhynchobodo, and Rhynchumonas. In contrast, Bodo and Cryptobia were polyphyletic, containing species in two or more sublineages that may represent separate genera.

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