Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts

The Euglenida is a diverse group of single celled eukaryotes with modes of nutrition that include phagotrophy, osmotrophy, and phototrophy. Phototrophic members of the group have attracted the most attention from previous researchers, and some species (e.g., Euglena gracilis) have become models in c...

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Main Author: Breglia, Susana Alicia
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42075
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-420752018-01-05T17:25:44Z Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts Breglia, Susana Alicia The Euglenida is a diverse group of single celled eukaryotes with modes of nutrition that include phagotrophy, osmotrophy, and phototrophy. Phototrophic members of the group have attracted the most attention from previous researchers, and some species (e.g., Euglena gracilis) have become models in cell biology research. Phagotrophic euglenids, by contrast, are difficult to cultivate and manipulate so are severely underrepresented in culture collections, comparative ultrastructural studies, and molecular phylogenetic studies. Species discovery and the comparative ultrastructure of phagotrophic euglenids within a phylogenetic context were the main aims of this thesis. These data are essential for a comprehensive knowledge of the overall diversity and evolutionary history of euglenids as a whole, as well as for a better understanding of the relationships with their closest euglenozoan relatives, the Kinetoplastida and the Diplonemida. I generated DNA sequences of heat shock protein 90 and small subunit (SSU) rRNA genes from several different species of phagotrophic euglenids in order to evaluate some of the deepest branches in the phylogeny of euglenozoans, especially the phylogenetic position of Petalomonas cantuscygni. This species has a set of morphological features that are intermediate between kinetoplastids and euglenids (e.g., pellicle strips and kinetoplast-like mitochondrial inclusions). I also characterized the ultrastructure, feeding behaviour, and phylogenetic position of Heteronema scaphurum, a phagotrophic euglenid that feeds on green algal prey and is equipped with a distinctive “cytoproct” or cell anus. My explorations in low oxygen marine sediments led me to discover and characterize a novel lineage of euglenozoans, the “Symbiontida”. Members of this group formed intimate symbiotic relationships with at least two distinct types of epibiotic bacteria: rod-shaped epsilon-proteobacteria and spherical-shaped verrucomicrobia. I was able to show, using electron microscopy, that the verrucomicrobial symbionts were capable of evasive sporulation using a conspicuous extrusive apparatus that consisted of a thread tightly wound around a central core of DNA. The highly similar episymbionts reported previously on a group of ciliates led to questions about host transfer and the convergent evolution of extrusive organelles across the tree of eukaryotes. Science, Faculty of Zoology, Department of Graduate 2012-04-18T20:18:17Z 2012-04-18T20:18:17Z 2012 2012-05 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42075 eng Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 International http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
description The Euglenida is a diverse group of single celled eukaryotes with modes of nutrition that include phagotrophy, osmotrophy, and phototrophy. Phototrophic members of the group have attracted the most attention from previous researchers, and some species (e.g., Euglena gracilis) have become models in cell biology research. Phagotrophic euglenids, by contrast, are difficult to cultivate and manipulate so are severely underrepresented in culture collections, comparative ultrastructural studies, and molecular phylogenetic studies. Species discovery and the comparative ultrastructure of phagotrophic euglenids within a phylogenetic context were the main aims of this thesis. These data are essential for a comprehensive knowledge of the overall diversity and evolutionary history of euglenids as a whole, as well as for a better understanding of the relationships with their closest euglenozoan relatives, the Kinetoplastida and the Diplonemida. I generated DNA sequences of heat shock protein 90 and small subunit (SSU) rRNA genes from several different species of phagotrophic euglenids in order to evaluate some of the deepest branches in the phylogeny of euglenozoans, especially the phylogenetic position of Petalomonas cantuscygni. This species has a set of morphological features that are intermediate between kinetoplastids and euglenids (e.g., pellicle strips and kinetoplast-like mitochondrial inclusions). I also characterized the ultrastructure, feeding behaviour, and phylogenetic position of Heteronema scaphurum, a phagotrophic euglenid that feeds on green algal prey and is equipped with a distinctive “cytoproct” or cell anus. My explorations in low oxygen marine sediments led me to discover and characterize a novel lineage of euglenozoans, the “Symbiontida”. Members of this group formed intimate symbiotic relationships with at least two distinct types of epibiotic bacteria: rod-shaped epsilon-proteobacteria and spherical-shaped verrucomicrobia. I was able to show, using electron microscopy, that the verrucomicrobial symbionts were capable of evasive sporulation using a conspicuous extrusive apparatus that consisted of a thread tightly wound around a central core of DNA. The highly similar episymbionts reported previously on a group of ciliates led to questions about host transfer and the convergent evolution of extrusive organelles across the tree of eukaryotes. === Science, Faculty of === Zoology, Department of === Graduate
author Breglia, Susana Alicia
spellingShingle Breglia, Susana Alicia
Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
author_facet Breglia, Susana Alicia
author_sort Breglia, Susana Alicia
title Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
title_short Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
title_full Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
title_fullStr Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
title_full_unstemmed Contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
title_sort contributions to the ultrastructural diversity and molecular phylogeny of phagotrophic euglenids and their episymbionts
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/42075
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