Chapter 28: Protists (1) Flashcards

1
Q

Explain the structural diversity of protists.

A
  • Protists are unicellular, although there
    are some colonial and multicellular species.
  • The organelles that protists use are the nucleus, endoplasmic reticulum, Golgi apparatus, and lysosomes.
  • Contractile vacuoles that pump excess water from the protistan cell
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2
Q

Explain the nutritional diversity of protists.

A
  • Some protists are photoautotrophs and contain chloroplasts.
  • Some are heterotrophs, absorbing organic molecules or ingesting larger food particles. - Still other protists, called mixotrophs, combine photosynthesis and heterotrophic nutrition.
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3
Q

Explain the reproduction diversity in protists

A
  • Some protists are only known to reproduce asexually; others can also reproduce sexually or at least employ the sexual processes of meiosis and fertilization.
  • All three basic types of sexual life cycles are represented among protists, along with some variations that do not quite fit any of these types.
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4
Q

Amitochondriates (lacking conventional mitochondria) are the oldest lineage of
eukaryotes. True or false?

A

It is no longer thought that amitochondriates (lacking conventional mitochondria) are the oldest lineage of eukaryotes

– Many have been shown to have mitochondria and have been reclassified

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5
Q

What are the 5 supergroups of protists?

A
  1. Excavata
  2. SAR
  3. Archaeplastida
  4. Unikonta
  5. Chromaveolata
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6
Q

Considerable evidence indicates that much of protist diversity has its origins in _________.

A

Considerable evidence indicates that much of protist diversity has its origins in
endosymbiosis.

Endosymbiosis is the process in which a unicellular organism engulfs another cell, which becomes an endosymbiont and then an organelle in the host cell

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7
Q

How did mitochondria and plastid evolve?

A

– Mitochondria evolved by endosymbiosis of an aerobic prokaryote

– Plastids evolved later by endosymbiosis of a photosynthetic cyanobacterium

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8
Q

The ancestral host of endosymbiosis may have been an _______ or a ________.

A

The ancestral host may have been an archaean or a “protoeukaryote”

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9
Q

Explain the evolution of mitochondria and plastid.

A
  • Mitochondria arose first through descent from a bacterium that was engulfed by a cell from an archaeal lineage
  • The plastid lineage evolved later from a photosynthetic cyanobacterium that was engulfed by a heterotrophic eukaryote
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10
Q

What did the plastid-bearing lineage of protists evolve into?

A

The plastid-bearing lineage of protists evolved into photosynthetic protists:
– red and green algae

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11
Q

Define primary endosymbiosis and secondary symbiosis.

A

Primary endosymbiosis because it was the first transfer of photosynthesis from a prokaryote to a eukaryote.

Photosynthesis continued to be passed to diverse groups and across kingdoms in a process called secondary endosymbiosis

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12
Q

Why would it be advantageous to the host to maintain a cyanobacterial endosymbiont?

A

It would have been advantageous to the host to maintain the cyanobacterial endosymbiont, as a source of sugar from photosynthesis.

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13
Q

How does endosymbiont bacteria become an organelle?

A

Gene transfer tookplace from endosymbiont to the host nucleus made it dependent on the host
– transferred genes need to be expressed properly
– the translated proteins must be targeted back into the organelle,
where they function

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14
Q

What are the characteristics of excavata?

A
  • The clade Excavata is characterized by its cytoskeleton
  • Some members have an “excavated” feeding groove
  • This group includes diplomonads, parabasalids, and euglenozoans
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15
Q

What are the characteristics of diplomonads and parabasalids?

A

Diplomonads and Parabasalids

  • These groups
    – lack plastids,
    – have modified mitochondria
    – most live in anaerobic environments

MAP

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16
Q

What are the characteristics of diplomonads?

A

Diplomonads

– Have modified mitochondria (mitosomes)
– Derive energy from anaerobic biochemical pathways
– Have two equal-sized nuclei and multiple flagella
– Are often parasites, for example, Giardia intestinalis

17
Q

What are the characteristics of Parabasalids?

A

Parabasalids

– Have reduced mitochondria called hydrogenosomes that generate some energy anaerobically
(H2 gas released as a by-product)

– Include Trichomonas vaginalis, the pathogen that causes yeast infections in human females

18
Q

What are the organisms that come under euglenozoa?

A

Euglenozoa is a diverse clade that includes :

– predatory heterotrophs
– photosynthetic autotrophs
– parasites

19
Q

What are the characteristics of Euglenozoa?

A
  • The main feature distinguishing them as a clade is a spiral or crystalline rod of unknown function inside their flagella
  • Clade includes
    – kinetoplastids and
    – euglenids
20
Q

What are the characteristics of kinetoplastid?

A
  • Kinetoplastids have a single mitochondrion with an organized mass of DNA called a kinetoplast
  • They include free-living species that feed on prokaryotes
    in
    – freshwater,
    – marine, and
    – moist terrestrial ecosystems
  • Some species are parasitic
    –(This group includes Trypanosoma, which causes sleeping sickness in humans)