Taxonomy Eukaryotes Part 1 Flashcards
Endosymbiosis theory and secondary endosymbiosis
How phylogenetics differs in eukaryotes to prokaryotes?
Endosymbiosis theory states that mitochondria engulfed by early archaea became the LUCA of eukaryotes and then later chloroplasts were engulfed by early ancestor of plants/algae
Secondary endosymbiosis theory is red or green algae being incorporated into another branch of eukaryotes
- red and green contain same chloroplasts indicating this happened later in time
Phylogenetics is less sensitive with SSU rRNA 18S sequencing than with 16S so more MLST is used for taxonomy
Red algae
AKA rhodophytes
Mostly marine, some fresh water and terrestrial
- multicellular, except for Galdieria living in acidic hot springs
Phycoerythrin pigment –> red color
- lower depth –> more phycoerythrin produced
Green algae
AKA Chlorophytes
Closely related to plants - mostly freshwater, some marine or terrestrial
- unicellular or multicellular
Can reproduce sexually or asexually
Amitochondriate eukaryotes
Organelles
Primitive eukaryotes without mitochondria - lost them due to lack of use living in anaerobic environment
Mitosome: reduced form of mitochondria without TCA enzymes or ETC
- Center of maturation for Fe-S clusters
Hydrogenosome: oxidation of Pyruvate –> H2, CO2 + acetate
- present in eukaryotes who do strict fermentation
*Endosymbiotic methanogens sometimes also present and feed off H2 produced by hydrogenosome fermentation (secondary endosymbiosis)
Cysts
Cysts are like endospores for eukaryotes
Hardy protection against deleterious environmental conditions, starvation, desiccation, infection by prokaryotes
Diplomonads and parabasalids
Both: unicellular, flagellated, no chloroplasts, anoxic living
Displomonads: ex. Giardia
- 2 nuclei
- contain mitosomes
Parabasalids: ex. Trichomonas vaginalis
- contain parabasal body to structurally support golgi complex
- contain hydrogenosomes but no mitochondria
Giardia lambia
Trichomonas vaginalis
Giardia lambia - type of Diplomonad, grows in colon and release cysts which get into the water supply through sewage and cause diarrhea
- Contain mitosomes and 2 nuclei
Trichomonas vaginalis - Type of Parabasalid, STD most common in developed countries
- adapted to sexual transmission and does not survive well outside host
- contain hydrogenosomes and parabasal body
No chloroplasts
Euglenozoans
Phylum of unicellular flagellated eukaryotes which include kinetoplastids and euglenids
Kinetoplastids
Kinetoplast
Example
Kinetoplastids type of euglenids which feed on bacteria
- Aquatic living, some species can cause serious disease
Kinetoplast - mass of DNA present in the single large mitochondria of some euglenozoans
Ex. Trypanosoma brucei
- African sleeping sickness (chronic + fatal)
- lives and grows in blood, infects CNS
- transmitted by tsetse fly
- single flagellum enclosed in membrane flap
Euglena
Type of euglenids
Nonpathogenic and phototrophic
- contains chloroplasts (green algae secondary symbiosis) and can exist as heterotroph
- can feed on bacteria by phagocytosis
Alveolates general
Types
Contain alveoli: sacs under cytoplasmic membrane
- may function to maintain osmotic balance
- contractile vacuole in Paramecium (water filter feeding)
Some contain red algae chloroplasts by secondary endosymbiosis
Can be:
1) Ciliates (Paramecium)
2) Dinoflagellates
3) Apicomplexans (Plasmodium)
Alveolates: Ciliates
Ciliates: cilia used for motility and feeding, and contain 2 nuclei (macro and micronuclei)
- micronuclei exchanged during conjugation/sexual reproduction
- can be parasitic or symbiotic in animals
Alveolates: Dinoflagellates
Dinoflagellates: marine/freshwater phototrophic organisms
- free living or symbiotic with corals
- 2 flagellum: transverse (direction) and longitudinal (forward)
Can secrete neurotoxins:
- In warm, polluted waters can cause red tides associated with human poisoning (paralytic shellfish poisoning) especially in mussels
Alveolates: Apicocomplexans
Apicocomplexans contain apicoplasts
- obligate parasites of animals
Apicoplasts: degenerate chloroplasts without pigments but have anabolic metabolic function
Complex life cycle:
Sporozoite (transmission), gametocyte (sexual reproduction), other stages
Causes severe diseases such as toxoplasmosis (Taxoplasma) and malaria (Plasmodium falciparum)