Labyrinthulomycetes

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Template:Short description Template:Automatic taxobox

Labyrinthulomycetes (ICNafp) or Labyrinthulea[1] (ICZN) is a class of protists that produce a network of filaments or tubes,[2] which serve as tracks for the cells to glide along and absorb nutrients for them. The two main groups are the labyrinthulids (or slime nets) and thraustochytrids. They are mostly marine, commonly found as parasites on algae and seagrasses or as decomposers on dead plant material. They also include some parasites of marine invertebrates and mixotrophic species that live in a symbiotic relationship with zoochlorella.[3][4][5]

Characteristics

Script error: No such module "Unsubst". Although they are outside the cells, the filaments of Labyrinthulomycetes are surrounded by a membrane. They are formed and connected with the cytoplasm by a unique organelle called a sagenogen or bothrosome. The cells are uninucleated and typically ovoid, and move back and forth along the amorphous network at speeds varying from 5-150 μm per minute. Among the labyrinthulids, the cells are enclosed within the tubes, and among the thraustochytrids, they are attached to their sides.

Evolution

Evolutionary origin

Labyrinthulomycetes are not fungi, but a monophyletic group of eukaryotes within the Stramenopiles. They belong to the phylum Bigyra, which contains other heterotrophic microorganisms such as the bicosoecids. Considering that the plastids from Stramenopiles are possibly the result of an event of endosymbiosis in their last common ancestor, the bicosoecids and the labyrinthulomycetes could have originated from a mixotrophic algal common ancestor that secondarily lost their plastids.[2]

Some characteristics of the labyrinthulomycetes can be explained by their origin from ancestral plastids. They produce omega-3 poly-unsaturated fatty acids using a desaturase usually present in chloroplasts. The zoospores of labyrinthulids have an eyespot composed of membrane-bound granules that resembles eyespots of photosynthetic stramenopiles, which are either within a plastid or believed to be derived from a plastid.[2]

Within Bigyra, the labyrinthulomycetes are the sister group to Eogyrea, a class containing the species Pseudophyllomitus vesiculosus and the environmental clade called MAST-4. Together they compose the subphylum Sagenista.[6][7]

Template:Clade

Classification

Labyrinthulomycetes or Labyrinthulea used to compose the defunct fungal phylum Labyrinthulomycota.[8] They were originally considered unusual slime moulds, although they are not very similar to the other sorts. The structure of their zoospores and genetic studies show them to be a primitive group of heterokonts, but their classification and treatment remains somewhat unsettled.

This class usually contained two orders, Labyrinthulales and Thraustochytriales (ICBN), or Labyrinthulida and Thraustochytrida (ICZN), but a different classification has recently been proposed.[5][9][10][11][8]

Genetic code

The labyrinthulomycete Thraustochytrium aureum is notable for the alternative genetic code of its mitochondria which use Template:Mono as a stop codon instead of coding for Leucine.[13] This code is represented by NCBI translation table 23, Thraustochytrium mitochondrial code.[14]

Genetic code Translation
table
DNA codon RNA codon Translation
with this code
Standard code
(Translation table 1)
Thraustochytrium mitochondrial 23 Template:Mono Template:Mono Template:Mono Template:Mono Template:Mono Template:Mono

Gallery

References

Template:Reflist

External links

Template:EB1911 Poster

Template:Sister project Template:Heterokont Template:Taxonbar

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  15. Cienkowski, L. (1867). Ueber den Bau und die Entwicklung der Labyrinthuleen. Arch. mikr. Anat., 3:274, [1].