Document of bibliographic reference 347814

BibliographicReference record

Type
Bibliographic resource
Type of document
Journal article
BibLvlCode
AS
Title
Evidence from the resurrected family Polyrhabdinidae Kamm, 1922 (Apicomplexa: Gregarinomorpha) supports the epimerite, an attachment organelle, as a major eugregarine innovation
Abstract

Background

Gregarines are a major group of apicomplexan parasites of invertebrates. The gregarine classification is largely incomplete because it relies primarily on light microscopy, while electron microscopy and molecular data in the group are fragmentary and often do not overlap. A key characteristic in gregarine taxonomy is the structure and function of their attachment organelles (AOs). AOs have been commonly classified as “mucrons” or “epimerites” based on their association with other cellular traits such as septation. An alternative proposal focused on the AOs structure, functional role, and developmental fate has recently restricted the terms “mucron” to archigregarines and “epimerite” to eugregarines.

Methods

Light microscopy and scanning and transmission electron microscopy, molecular phylogenetic analyses of ribosomal RNA genes.

Results

We obtained the first data on fine morphology of aseptate eugregarines Polyrhabdina pygospionis and Polyrhabdina cf. spionis, the type species. We demonstrate that their AOs differ from the mucron in archigregarines and represent an epimerite structurally resembling that in other eugregarines examined using electron microscopy. We then used the concatenated ribosomal operon DNA sequences (SSU, 5.8S, and LSU rDNA) of P. pygospionis to explore the phylogeny of eugregarines with a resolution superior to SSU rDNA alone. The obtained phylogenies show that the Polyrhabdina clade represents an independent, deep-branching family in the Ancoroidea clade within eugregarines. Combined, these results lend strong support to the hypothesis that the epimerite is a synapomorphic innovation of eugregarines. Based on these findings, we resurrect the family Polyrhabdinidae Kamm, 1922 and erect and diagnose the family Trollidiidae fam. n. within the superfamily Ancoroidea Simdyanov et al., 2017. Additionally, we re-describe the characteristics of P. pygospionis, emend the diagnoses of the genus Polyrhabdina, the family Polyrhabdinidae, and the superfamily Ancoroidea.

WebOfScience code
https://www.webofscience.com/wos/woscc/full-record/WOS:000709458300003
Bibliographic citation
Paskerova, G.; Miroliubova, T.S.; Valigurová, A.; Janouškovec, J.; Kováciková, M.; Diakin, A.; Sokolova, Y.Y.; Mikhailov, K.V.; Aleoshin, V.V.; Simdyanov, T.G. (2021). Evidence from the resurrected family Polyrhabdinidae Kamm, 1922 (Apicomplexa: Gregarinomorpha) supports the epimerite, an attachment organelle, as a major eugregarine innovation. PeerJ 9: e11912. https://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11912
Topic
Marine
Is peer reviewed
true
Access rights
open access
Is accessible for free
true

Authors

author
Name
Gita Paskerova
author
Name
Tatiana Miroliubova
author
Name
Andrea Valigurová
author
Name
Jan Janouškovec
author
Name
Magdaléna Kováciková
author
Name
Andrei Diakin
author
Name
Yuliya Ya. Sokolova
author
Name
Kirill Mikhailov
author
Name
Vladimir Aleoshin
author
Name
Timur Simdyanov

Links

referenced creativework
type
DOI
accessURL
https://dx.doi.org/10.7717/peerj.11912

taxonomic terms

taxonomic terms associated with this publication
Apicomplexa
Eugregarinida

Document metadata

date created
2021-12-02
date modified
2021-12-06