24 results on '"Tice AK"'
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2. Amoebozoan testate amoebae illuminate the diversity of heterotrophs and the complexity of ecosystems throughout geological time.
- Author
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Porfirio-Sousa AL, Tice AK, Morais L, Ribeiro GM, Blandenier Q, Dumack K, Eglit Y, Fry NW, Gomes E Souza MB, Henderson TC, Kleitz-Singleton F, Singer D, Brown MW, and Lahr DJG
- Subjects
- Biodiversity, Biological Evolution, Amoebozoa genetics, Amoebozoa classification, Amoeba genetics, Amoeba classification, Amoeba physiology, Eukaryota genetics, Eukaryota classification, Phylogeny, Ecosystem, Fossils, Heterotrophic Processes
- Abstract
Heterotrophic protists are vital in Earth's ecosystems, influencing carbon and nutrient cycles and occupying key positions in food webs as microbial predators. Fossils and molecular data suggest the emergence of predatory microeukaryotes and the transition to a eukaryote-rich marine environment by 800 million years ago (Ma). Neoproterozoic vase-shaped microfossils (VSMs) linked to Arcellinida testate amoebae represent the oldest evidence of heterotrophic microeukaryotes. This study explores the phylogenetic relationship and divergence times of modern Arcellinida and related taxa using a relaxed molecular clock approach. We estimate the origin of nodes leading to extant members of the Arcellinida Order to have happened during the latest Mesoproterozoic and Neoproterozoic (1054 to 661 Ma), while the divergence of extant infraorders postdates the Silurian. Our results demonstrate that at least one major heterotrophic eukaryote lineage originated during the Neoproterozoic. A putative radiation of eukaryotic groups (e.g., Arcellinida) during the early-Neoproterozoic sustained by favorable ecological and environmental conditions may have contributed to eukaryotic life endurance during the Cryogenian severe ice ages. Moreover, we infer that Arcellinida most likely already inhabited terrestrial habitats during the Neoproterozoic, coexisting with terrestrial Fungi and green algae, before land plant radiation. The most recent extant Arcellinida groups diverged during the Silurian Period, alongside other taxa within Fungi and flowering plants. These findings shed light on heterotrophic microeukaryotes' evolutionary history and ecological significance in Earth's ecosystems, using testate amoebae as a proxy.
- Published
- 2024
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3. Molecular phylogenetic analyses support the validity of Ceratiomyxa porioides (Amoebozoa, Eumycetozoa) at species level.
- Author
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Fry NW, Jones RE, Blandenier Q, Tice AK, Porfirio-Sousa AL, Kleitz-Singleton F, Henderson TC, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Transcriptome, Amoebozoa genetics, Amoebozoa classification, Amoebozoa cytology, Phylogeny, Species Specificity
- Abstract
The frequently encountered macroscopic slime molds of the genus Ceratiomyxa have long been recognized by mycologists and protistologists for hundreds of years. These organisms are amoebozoan amoebae that live and grow inside and on the surface of decaying wood. When conditions are favorable, they form subaerial sporulating structures called fruiting bodies which take on a variety of forms. These forms are typically some arrangement of column and/or branches, but one is uniquely poroid, forming folds instead. Originally, this poroid morphology was designated as its own species. However, it was not always clear what significance fruiting body morphology held in determining species. Currently, Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa var. porioides, the poroid form, is considered a taxonomic variety of Ceratiomyxa fruticulosa based on morphological designation alone. Despite its long history of observation and study, the genus Ceratiomyxa has been paid little molecular attention to alleviate these morphological issues. We have obtained the first transcriptomes of the taxon C. fruticulosa var. porioides and found single gene phylogenetic and multigene phylogenomic support to separate it from C. fruticulosa. This provides molecular evidence that fruiting body morphology does correspond to species level diversity. Therefore, we formally raise Ceratiomyxa porioides to species level., (Copyright © 2024 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
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- 2024
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4. Living in the cracks: Two novel genera of Variosea (Amoebozoa) discovered on an urban sidewalk.
- Author
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Fry N, Schuler GA, Jones RE, Kooienga PG, Jira V, Shepherd M, Tice AK, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Soil parasitology, Ecosystem, DNA, Protozoan genetics, Cities, Phylogeny, Amoebozoa classification, Amoebozoa genetics, Amoebozoa isolation & purification
- Abstract
Biological soil crusts represent a rich habitat for diverse and complex eukaryotic microbial communities. A unique but extremely common habitat is the urban sidewalk and its cracks that collect detritus. While these habitats are ubiquitous across the globe, little to no work has been conducted to characterize protists found there. Amoeboid protists are major predators of bacteria and other microbial eukaryotes in these microhabitats and therefore play a substantial ecological role. From sidewalk crack soil crusts, we have isolated three naked amoebae with finely tapered subpseudopodia, and a simple life cycle consisting of a trophic amoeba and a cyst stage. Using a holistic approach including light, electron, and fluorescence microscopy as well as phylogenetics using the ribosomal small subunit rRNA gene and phylogenomics using 230 nuclear genes, we find that these amoeboid organisms fail to match any previously described eukaryote genus. However, we determined the amoebae belong to the amoebozoan lineage Variosea based on phylogenetics. The molecular analyses place our isolates in two novel genera forming a grade at the base of the variosean group Protosteliida. These three novel varioseans among two novel genera and species are herein named "Kanabo kenzan" and "Parakanabo toge.", (© 2024 International Society of Protistologists.)
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- 2024
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5. Create, Analyze, and Visualize Phylogenomic Datasets Using PhyloFisher.
- Author
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Jones RE, Tice AK, Eliáš M, Eme L, Kolísko M, Nenarokov S, Pánek T, Rokas A, Salomaki E, Strassert JFH, Shen XX, Žihala D, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Phylogeny, Amino Acid Sequence, Culture, Biological Evolution, Amino Acids
- Abstract
PhyloFisher is a software package written primarily in Python3 that can be used for the creation, analysis, and visualization of phylogenomic datasets that consist of protein sequences from eukaryotic organisms. Unlike many existing phylogenomic pipelines, PhyloFisher comes with a manually curated database of 240 protein-coding genes, a subset of a previous phylogenetic dataset sampled from 304 eukaryotic taxa. The software package can also utilize a user-created database of eukaryotic proteins, which may be more appropriate for shallow evolutionary questions. PhyloFisher is also equipped with a set of utilities to aid in running routine analyses, such as the prediction of alternative genetic codes, removal of genes and/or taxa based on occupancy/completeness of the dataset, testing for amino acid compositional heterogeneity among sequences, removal of heterotachious and/or fast-evolving sites, removal of fast-evolving taxa, supermatrix creation from randomly resampled genes, and supermatrix creation from nucleotide sequences. © 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC. Basic Protocol 1: Constructing a phylogenomic dataset Basic Protocol 2: Performing phylogenomic analyses Support Protocol 1: Installing PhyloFisher Support Protocol 2: Creating a custom phylogenomic database., (© 2024 Wiley Periodicals LLC.)
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- 2024
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6. Phylogenetic placement of the protosteloid amoeba Microglomus paxillus identifies another case of sporocarpic fruiting in Discosea (Amoebozoa).
- Author
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Tice AK, Spiegel FW, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Phylogeny, Biological Evolution, Eukaryota, Amoeba genetics, Amoebozoa genetics
- Abstract
Protosteloid amoebae are a paraphyletic assemblage of amoeboid protists found exclusively in the eukaryotic assemblage Amoebozoa. These amoebae can facultatively form a dispersal structure known as a fruiting body, or more specifically, a sporocarp, from a single amoeboid cell. Sporocarps consist of one to a few spores atop a noncellular stalk. Protosteloid amoebae are known in two out of three well-established major assemblages of Amoebozoa. Amoebae with a protosteloid life cycle are known in the major Amoebozoa lineages Discosea and Evosea but not in Tubulinea. To date, only one genus, which is monotypic, lacks sequence data and, therefore, remains phylogenetically homeless. To further clarify the evolutionary milieu of sporocarpic fruiting we used single-cell transcriptomics to obtain data from individual sporocarps of isolates of the protosteloid amoeba Microglomus paxillus. Our phylogenomic analyses using 229 protein coding markers suggest that M. paxillus is a member of the Discosea lineage of Amoebozoa most closely related to Mycamoeba gemmipara. Due to the hypervariable nature of the SSU rRNA sequence we were unable to further resolve the phylogenetic position of M. paxillus in taxon rich datasets using only this marker. Regardless, our results widen the known distribution of sporocarpy in Discosea and stimulate the debate between a single or multiple origins of sporocarpic fruiting in Amoebozoa., (© 2023 International Society of Protistologists.)
- Published
- 2023
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7. Multicellularity: Amoebae follow the leader to food.
- Author
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Tice AK and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Amoeba
- Abstract
Multicellular fruiting body formation through aggregation of individual cells has been known in Fonticla alba since the original description of the organism. A new study reveals the existence of a second transient collective cellular behavior separate from fruiting body formation., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2022
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8. An Enigmatic Stramenopile Sheds Light on Early Evolution in Ochrophyta Plastid Organellogenesis.
- Author
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Azuma T, Pánek T, Tice AK, Kayama M, Kobayashi M, Miyashita H, Suzaki T, Yabuki A, Brown MW, and Kamikawa R
- Subjects
- Ecosystem, Evolution, Molecular, Phylogeny, Plants genetics, Plastids genetics, Genome, Plastid, Stramenopiles genetics
- Abstract
Ochrophyta is an algal group belonging to the Stramenopiles and comprises diverse lineages of algae which contribute significantly to the oceanic ecosystems as primary producers. However, early evolution of the plastid organelle in Ochrophyta is not fully understood. In this study, we provide a well-supported tree of the Stramenopiles inferred by the large-scale phylogenomic analysis that unveils the eukaryvorous (nonphotosynthetic) protist Actinophrys sol (Actinophryidae) is closely related to Ochrophyta. We used genomic and transcriptomic data generated from A. sol to detect molecular traits of its plastid and we found no evidence of plastid genome and plastid-mediated biosynthesis, consistent with previous ultrastructural studies that did not identify any plastids in Actinophryidae. Moreover, our phylogenetic analyses of particular biosynthetic pathways provide no evidence of a current and past plastid in A. sol. However, we found more than a dozen organellar aminoacyl-tRNA synthases (aaRSs) that are of algal origin. Close relationships between aaRS from A. sol and their ochrophyte homologs document gene transfer of algal genes that happened before the divergence of Actinophryidae and Ochrophyta lineages. We further showed experimentally that organellar aaRSs of A. sol are targeted exclusively to mitochondria, although organellar aaRSs in Ochrophyta are dually targeted to mitochondria and plastids. Together, our findings suggested that the last common ancestor of Actinophryidae and Ochrophyta had not yet completed the establishment of host-plastid partnership as seen in the current Ochrophyta species, but acquired at least certain nuclear-encoded genes for the plastid functions., (© The Author(s) 2022. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
- Published
- 2022
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9. Phylogenetic reconstruction and evolution of the Rab GTPase gene family in Amoebozoa.
- Author
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Porfírio-Sousa AL, Tice AK, Brown MW, and J G Lahr D
- Subjects
- Phylogeny, Evolution, Molecular, Eukaryota metabolism, rab GTP-Binding Proteins genetics, rab GTP-Binding Proteins metabolism, Amoebozoa genetics, Amoebozoa metabolism
- Abstract
Rab GTPase is a paralog-rich gene family that controls the maintenance of the eukaryotic cell compartmentalization system. Diverse eukaryotes have varying numbers of Rab paralogs. Currently, little is known about the evolutionary pattern of Rab GTPase in most major eukaryotic 'supergroups'. Here, we present a comprehensive phylogenetic reconstruction of the Rab GTPase gene family in the eukaryotic 'supergroup' Amoebozoa, a diverse lineage represented by unicellular and multicellular organisms. We demonstrate that Amoebozoa conserved 20 of the 23 ancestral Rab GTPases predicted to be present in the last eukaryotic common ancestor and massively expanded several 'novel' in-paralogs. Due to these 'novel' in-paralogs, the Rab family composition dramatically varies between the members of Amoebozoa; as a consequence, 'supergroup'-based studies may significantly change our current understanding of the evolution and diversity of this gene family. The high diversity of the Rab GTPase gene family in Amoebozoa makes this 'supergroup' a key lineage to study and advance our knowledge of the evolution of Rab in Eukaryotes.
- Published
- 2022
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10. PhyloFisher: A phylogenomic package for resolving eukaryotic relationships.
- Author
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Tice AK, Žihala D, Pánek T, Jones RE, Salomaki ED, Nenarokov S, Burki F, Eliáš M, Eme L, Roger AJ, Rokas A, Shen XX, Strassert JFH, Kolísko M, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Eukaryota genetics, Phylogeny, Software
- Abstract
Phylogenomic analyses of hundreds of protein-coding genes aimed at resolving phylogenetic relationships is now a common practice. However, no software currently exists that includes tools for dataset construction and subsequent analysis with diverse validation strategies to assess robustness. Furthermore, there are no publicly available high-quality curated databases designed to assess deep (>100 million years) relationships in the tree of eukaryotes. To address these issues, we developed an easy-to-use software package, PhyloFisher (https://github.com/TheBrownLab/PhyloFisher), written in Python 3. PhyloFisher includes a manually curated database of 240 protein-coding genes from 304 eukaryotic taxa covering known eukaryotic diversity, a novel tool for ortholog selection, and utilities that will perform diverse analyses required by state-of-the-art phylogenomic investigations. Through phylogenetic reconstructions of the tree of eukaryotes and of the Saccharomycetaceae clade of budding yeasts, we demonstrate the utility of the PhyloFisher workflow and the provided starting database to address phylogenetic questions across a large range of evolutionary time points for diverse groups of organisms. We also demonstrate that undetected paralogy can remain in phylogenomic "single-copy orthogroup" datasets constructed using widely accepted methods such as all vs. all BLAST searches followed by Markov Cluster Algorithm (MCL) clustering and application of automated tree pruning algorithms. Finally, we show how the PhyloFisher workflow helps detect inadvertent paralog inclusions, allowing the user to make more informed decisions regarding orthology assignments, leading to a more accurate final dataset., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist.
- Published
- 2021
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11. The integrin-mediated adhesive complex in the ancestor of animals, fungi, and amoebae.
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Kang S, Tice AK, Stairs CW, Jones RE, Lahr DJG, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Amoeba, Animals, Evolution, Molecular, Fungi, Phylogeny, Cell Adhesion, Eukaryota, Integrins
- Abstract
Integrins are transmembrane receptors that activate signal transduction pathways upon extracellular matrix binding. The integrin-mediated adhesive complex (IMAC) mediates various cell physiological processes. Although the IMAC was thought to be specific to animals, in the past ten years these complexes were discovered in other lineages of Obazoa, the group containing animals, fungi, and several microbial eukaryotes. Very recently, many genomes and transcriptomes from Amoebozoa (the eukaryotic supergroup sister to Obazoa), other obazoans, orphan protist lineages, and the eukaryotes' closest prokaryotic relatives, have become available. To increase the resolution of where and when IMAC proteins exist and have emerged, we surveyed these newly available genomes and transcriptomes for the presence of IMAC proteins. Our results highlight that many of these proteins appear to have evolved earlier in eukaryote evolution than previously thought and that co-option of this apparently ancient protein complex was key to the emergence of animal-type multicellularity. The role of the IMACs in amoebozoans is unknown, but they play critical adhesive roles in at least some unicellular organisms., Competing Interests: Declaration of interests The authors declare no competing interests., (Copyright © 2021 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2021
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12. An efficient single-cell transcriptomics workflow for microbial eukaryotes benchmarked on Giardia intestinalis cells.
- Author
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Onsbring H, Tice AK, Barton BT, Brown MW, and Ettema TJG
- Subjects
- Gene Expression Regulation, Protozoan Proteins genetics, Sequence Analysis, RNA, Workflow, Gene Expression Profiling methods, Giardia lamblia genetics, Single-Cell Analysis methods
- Abstract
Background: Most diversity in the eukaryotic tree of life is represented by microbial eukaryotes, which is a polyphyletic group also referred to as protists. Among the protists, currently sequenced genomes and transcriptomes give a biased view of the actual diversity. This biased view is partly caused by the scientific community, which has prioritized certain microbes of biomedical and agricultural importance. Additionally, some protists remain difficult to maintain in cultures, which further influences what has been studied. It is now possible to bypass the time-consuming process of cultivation and directly analyze the gene content of single protist cells. Single-cell genomics was used in the first experiments where individual protists cells were genomically explored. Unfortunately, single-cell genomics for protists is often associated with low genome recovery and the assembly process can be complicated because of repetitive intergenic regions. Sequencing repetitive sequences can be avoided if single-cell transcriptomics is used, which only targets the part of the genome that is transcribed., Results: In this study we test different modifications of Smart-seq2, a single-cell RNA sequencing protocol originally developed for mammalian cells, to establish a robust and more cost-efficient workflow for protists. The diplomonad Giardia intestinalis was used in all experiments and the available genome for this species allowed us to benchmark our results. We could observe increased transcript recovery when freeze-thaw cycles were added as an extra step to the Smart-seq2 protocol. Further we reduced the reaction volume and purified the amplified cDNA with alternative beads to test different cost-reducing changes of Smart-seq2. Neither improved the procedure, and reducing the volumes by half led to significantly fewer genes detected. We also added a 5' biotin modification to our primers and reduced the concentration of oligo-dT, to potentially reduce generation of artifacts. Except adding freeze-thaw cycles and reducing the volume, no other modifications lead to a significant change in gene detection. Therefore, we suggest adding freeze-thaw cycles to Smart-seq2 when working with protists and further consider our other modification described to improve cost and time-efficiency., Conclusions: The presented single-cell RNA sequencing workflow represents an efficient method to explore the diversity and cell biology of individual protist cells.
- Published
- 2020
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13. A genetic toolbox for marine protists.
- Author
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Brown MW and Tice AK
- Subjects
- Eukaryota
- Published
- 2020
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14. A Non-Flagellated Member of the Myxogastria and Expansion of the Echinosteliida.
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Fiore-Donno AM, Tice AK, and Brown MW
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- Myxomycetes genetics, Peptide Elongation Factor 1 analysis, Protozoan Proteins analysis, RNA, Protozoan analysis, RNA, Ribosomal analysis, Myxomycetes classification, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Myxogastria (also called Myxomycetes or plasmodial slime-moulds) are mostly known through their usually conspicuous fruiting bodies. Another unifying trait is the presence of a facultative flagellate stage along with the obligate amoeboid stage. Here we show with two-gene phylogenies (SSU rRNA and EF-1alpha genes) that the incertae sedis, non-flagellate Echinosteliopsis oligospora belongs to the dark-spore clade (Fuscisporidia) of the Myxogastria. In addition, we confirm that Echinostelium bisporum, firstly described as a protostelid, belongs to the Echinosteliida, which are divided into three major clades and are paraphyletic to the remaining Fuscisporidia., (© 2018 International Society of Protistologists.)
- Published
- 2019
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15. Phylogenomics and Morphological Reconstruction of Arcellinida Testate Amoebae Highlight Diversity of Microbial Eukaryotes in the Neoproterozoic.
- Author
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Lahr DJG, Kosakyan A, Lara E, Mitchell EAD, Morais L, Porfirio-Sousa AL, Ribeiro GM, Tice AK, Pánek T, Kang S, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Genes, Protozoan, Phylogeny, Fossils anatomy & histology, Lobosea classification, Lobosea genetics
- Abstract
Life was microbial for the majority of Earth's history, but as very few microbial lineages leave a fossil record, the Precambrian evolution of life remains shrouded in mystery. Shelled (testate) amoebae stand out as an exception with rich documented diversity in the Neoproterozoic as vase-shaped microfossils (VSMs). While there is general consensus that most of these can be attributed to the Arcellinida lineage in Amoebozoa, it is still unclear whether they can be used as key fossils for interpretation of early eukaryotic evolution. Here, we present a well-resolved phylogenomic reconstruction based on 250 genes, obtained using single-cell transcriptomic techniques from a representative selection of 19 Arcellinid testate amoeba taxa. The robust phylogenetic framework enables deeper interpretations of evolution in this lineage and demanded an updated classification of the group. Additionally, we performed reconstruction of ancestral morphologies, yielding hypothetical ancestors remarkably similar to existing Neoproterozoic VSMs. We demonstrate that major lineages of testate amoebae were already diversified before the Sturtian glaciation (720 mya), supporting the hypothesis that massive eukaryotic diversification took place in the early Neoproterozoic and congruent with the interpretation that VSM are arcellinid testate amoebae., (Copyright © 2019 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2019
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16. Phylogeny and Classification of Novel Diversity in Sainouroidea (Cercozoa, Rhizaria) Sheds Light on a Highly Diverse and Divergent Clade.
- Author
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Schuler GA, Tice AK, Pearce RA, Foreman E, Stone J, Gammill S, Willson JD, Reading C, Silberman JD, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Cercozoa cytology, Cercozoa genetics, Cluster Analysis, DNA, Protozoan chemistry, DNA, Protozoan genetics, DNA, Ribosomal chemistry, DNA, Ribosomal genetics, Environmental Microbiology, Microscopy, Microscopy, Electron, Transmission, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Cercozoa classification, Cercozoa isolation & purification, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Sainouroidea is a molecularly diverse clade of cercozoan flagellates and amoebae in the eukaryotic supergroup Rhizaria. Previous 18S rDNA environmental sequencing of globally collected fecal and soil samples revealed great diversity and high sequence divergence in the Sainouroidea. However, a very limited amount of this diversity has been observed or described. The two described genera of amoebae in this clade are Guttulinopsis, which displays aggregative multicellularity, and Rosculus, which does not. Although the identity of Guttulinopsis is straightforward due to the multicellular fruiting bodies they form, the same is not true for Rosculus, and the actual identity of the original isolate is unclear. Here we isolated amoebae with morphologies like that of Guttulinopsis and Rosculus from many environments and analyzed them using 18S rDNA sequencing, light microscopy, and transmission electron microscopy. We define a molecular species concept for Sainouroidea that resulted in the description of 4 novel genera and 12 novel species of naked amoebae. Aggregative fruiting is restricted to the genus Guttulinopsis, but other than this there is little morphological variation amongst these taxa. Taken together, simple identification of these amoebae is problematic and potentially unresolvable without the 18S rDNA sequence., (Copyright © 2018 Elsevier GmbH. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2018
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17. Modification of Lipase with Poly(4-acryloylmorpholine) Enhances Solubility and Transesterification Activity in Anhydrous Ionic Liquids.
- Author
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Chado GR, Holland EN, Tice AK, Stoykovich MP, and Kaar JL
- Subjects
- Acrylamides chemistry, Biocatalysis, Esterification, Lipase chemical synthesis, Morpholines chemistry, Polymers chemical synthesis, Solubility, Bacillus subtilis enzymology, Ionic Liquids chemistry, Lipase chemistry, Polymers chemistry
- Abstract
Tuning the molecular interaction between enzymes and their solvent environment through polymer modification can greatly improve activity and thus utility in biocatalytic reactions. In this work, this approach was exploited to enhance the activity of lipase A (LipA) from Bacillus subtilis in anhydrous ionic liquids (ILs), which are highly attractive solvents for biocatalysis. Specifically, we showed that the transesterification activity of LipA in anhydrous 1-butyl-3-methyl imidazolium hexafluorophosphate ([BMIM][PF
6 ]) was improved up to 19-fold via covalently conjugating the enzyme with the IL-soluble polymer poly(4-acryloylmorpholine) (PAcMO). The increase in transesterification activity correlated with an increase in LipA solubility in [BMIM][PF6 ] as well as, notably, the number of conjugated PAcMO repeat units. Light scattering results further showed that the attachment of PAcMO disrupted the aggregation of LipA in aqueous buffer, which was used as a proxy to understand the mechanism of activation of LipA in the IL, where aggregation was more pronounced. Additionally, using static light scattering, the Flory-Huggins interaction parameter (χ) for the polymer-IL interactions was determined (0.457). The favorable PAcMO-IL interactions presumably compensated for the unfavorable interactions between the enzyme and IL, which resulted in the improvement in dissolution and, in turn, activity due to reduced diffusional limitations. Through rationally considering χ, a similar approach may be used to tune the molecular interaction between other enzymes and ILs with other polymers, which has widespread implications for the enhancement of biocatalysis in ILs.- Published
- 2018
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18. Phylogenomics Places Orphan Protistan Lineages in a Novel Eukaryotic Super-Group.
- Author
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Brown MW, Heiss AA, Kamikawa R, Inagaki Y, Yabuki A, Tice AK, Shiratori T, Ishida KI, Hashimoto T, Simpson AGB, and Roger AJ
- Subjects
- Eukaryota classification, Genomics methods, High-Throughput Nucleotide Sequencing, Transcriptome, Eukaryota genetics, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Recent phylogenetic analyses position certain "orphan" protist lineages deep in the tree of eukaryotic life, but their exact placements are poorly resolved. We conducted phylogenomic analyses that incorporate deeply sequenced transcriptomes from representatives of collodictyonids (diphylleids), rigifilids, Mantamonas, and ancyromonads (planomonads). Analyses of 351 genes, using site-heterogeneous mixture models, strongly support a novel super-group-level clade that includes collodictyonids, rigifilids, and Mantamonas, which we name "CRuMs". Further, they robustly place CRuMs as the closest branch to Amorphea (including animals and fungi). Ancyromonads are strongly inferred to be more distantly related to Amorphea than are CRuMs. They emerge either as sister to malawimonads, or as a separate deeper branch. CRuMs and ancyromonads represent two distinct major groups that branch deeply on the lineage that includes animals, near the most commonly inferred root of the eukaryote tree. This makes both groups crucial in examinations of the deepest-level history of extant eukaryotes., (© The Author(s) 2018. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
- Published
- 2018
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19. Between a Pod and a Hard Test: The Deep Evolution of Amoebae.
- Author
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Kang S, Tice AK, Spiegel FW, Silberman JD, Pánek T, Cepicka I, Kostka M, Kosakyan A, Alcântara DMC, Roger AJ, Shadwick LL, Smirnov A, Kudryavtsev A, Lahr DJG, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Amoeba metabolism, Animals, Biological Evolution, Eukaryota genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Fungi genetics, Gene Library, Invertebrates genetics, Phylogeny, Sequence Analysis, DNA methods, Amoeba genetics, Amoebozoa genetics
- Abstract
Amoebozoa is the eukaryotic supergroup sister to Obazoa, the lineage that contains the animals and Fungi, as well as their protistan relatives, and the breviate and apusomonad flagellates. Amoebozoa is extraordinarily diverse, encompassing important model organisms and significant pathogens. Although amoebozoans are integral to global nutrient cycles and present in nearly all environments, they remain vastly understudied. We present a robust phylogeny of Amoebozoa based on broad representative set of taxa in a phylogenomic framework (325 genes). By sampling 61 taxa using culture-based and single-cell transcriptomics, our analyses show two major clades of Amoebozoa, Discosea, and Tevosa. This phylogeny refutes previous studies in major respects. Our results support the hypothesis that the last common ancestor of Amoebozoa was sexual and flagellated, it also may have had the ability to disperse propagules from a sporocarp-type fruiting body. Overall, the main macroevolutionary patterns in Amoebozoa appear to result from the parallel losses of homologous characters of a multiphase life cycle that included flagella, sex, and sporocarps rather than independent acquisition of convergent features., (© The Author 2017. Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Society for Molecular Biology and Evolution.)
- Published
- 2017
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20. Expansion of the molecular and morphological diversity of Acanthamoebidae (Centramoebida, Amoebozoa) and identification of a novel life cycle type within the group.
- Author
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Tice AK, Shadwick LL, Fiore-Donno AM, Geisen S, Kang S, Schuler GA, Spiegel FW, Wilkinson KA, Bonkowski M, Dumack K, Lahr DJ, Voelcker E, Clauß S, Zhang J, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Acanthopodina cytology, Acanthopodina genetics, Evolution, Molecular, Sequence Analysis, DNA, Acanthopodina classification, Phylogeny, Protozoan Proteins genetics
- Abstract
Background: Acanthamoebidae is a "family" level amoebozoan group composed of the genera Acanthamoeba, Protacanthamoeba, and very recently Luapeleamoeba. This clade of amoebozoans has received considerable attention from the broader scientific community as Acanthamoeba spp. represent both model organisms and human pathogens. While the classical composition of the group (Acanthamoeba + Protacanthamoeba) has been well accepted due to the morphological and ultrastructural similarities of its members, the Acanthamoebidae has never been highly statistically supported in single gene phylogenetic reconstructions of Amoebozoa either by maximum likelihood (ML) or Bayesian analyses., Results: Here we show using a phylogenomic approach that the Acanthamoebidae is a fully supported monophyletic group within Amoebozoa with both ML and Bayesian analyses. We also expand the known range of morphological and life cycle diversity found in the Acanthamoebidae by demonstrating that the amoebozoans "Protostelium" arachisporum, Dracoamoeba jormungandri n. g. n. sp., and Vacuolamoeba acanthoformis n.g. n.sp., belong within the group. We also found that "Protostelium" pyriformis is clearly a species of Acanthamoeba making it the first reported sporocarpic member of the genus, that is, an amoeba that individually forms a walled, dormant propagule elevated by a non-cellular stalk. Our phylogenetic analyses recover a fully supported Acanthamoebidae composed of five genera. Two of these genera (Acanthamoeba and Luapeleameoba) have members that are sporocarpic., Conclusions: Our results provide high statistical support for an Acanthamoebidae that is composed of five distinct genera. This study increases the known morphological diversity of this group and shows that species of Acanthamoeba can include spore-bearing stages. This further illustrates the widespread nature of spore-bearing stages across the tree of Amoebozoa., Reviewers: This article was reviewed by Drs. Eugene Koonin, Purificacion Lopez-Garcia and Sandra Baldauf. Sandra Baldauf was nominated by Purificacion Lopez-Garcia, an Editorial Board member.
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- 2016
- Full Text
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21. Evolution of bacterial recombinase A (recA) in eukaryotes explained by addition of genomic data of key microbial lineages.
- Author
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Hofstatter PG, Tice AK, Kang S, Brown MW, and Lahr DJ
- Subjects
- Amoebozoa enzymology, Amoebozoa genetics, Dictyostelium enzymology, Dictyostelium genetics, Eukaryota enzymology, Evolution, Molecular, Phylogeny, Bacterial Proteins genetics, Eukaryota genetics, Gene Transfer, Horizontal, Rec A Recombinases genetics
- Abstract
Recombinase enzymes promote DNA repair by homologous recombination. The genes that encode them are ancestral to life, occurring in all known dominions: viruses, Eubacteria, Archaea and Eukaryota. Bacterial recombinases are also present in viruses and eukaryotic groups (supergroups), presumably via ancestral events of lateral gene transfer. The eukaryotic recA genes have two distinct origins (mitochondrial and plastidial), whose acquisition by eukaryotes was possible via primary (bacteria-eukaryote) and/or secondary (eukaryote-eukaryote) endosymbiotic gene transfers (EGTs). Here we present a comprehensive phylogenetic analysis of the recA genealogy, with substantially increased taxonomic sampling in the bacteria, viruses, eukaryotes and a special focus on the key eukaryotic supergroup Amoebozoa, earlier represented only by Dictyostelium We demonstrate that several major eukaryotic lineages have lost the bacterial recombinases (including Opisthokonta and Excavata), whereas others have retained them (Amoebozoa, Archaeplastida and the SAR-supergroups). When absent, the bacterial recA homologues may have been lost entirely (secondary loss of canonical mitochondria) or replaced by other eukaryotic recombinases. RecA proteins have a transit peptide for organellar import, where they act. The reconstruction of the RecA phylogeny with its EGT events presented here retells the intertwined evolutionary history of eukaryotes and bacteria, while further illuminating the events of endosymbiosis in eukaryotes by expanding the collection of widespread genes that provide insight to this deep history., (© 2016 The Author(s).)
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- 2016
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22. Sorodiplophrys stercorea: Another Novel Lineage of Sorocarpic Multicellularity.
- Author
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Tice AK, Silberman JD, Walthall AC, Le KN, Spiegel FW, and Brown MW
- Subjects
- Animals, Base Sequence, Cattle parasitology, DNA, Protozoan isolation & purification, DNA, Ribosomal, Genes, rRNA genetics, Horses parasitology, Mississippi, Rhizaria classification, Stramenopiles cytology, Stramenopiles genetics, Phylogeny, Stramenopiles classification, Stramenopiles isolation & purification
- Abstract
Sorodiplophrys stercorea is a sorocarpic organism that utilizes filose pseudopodia for locomotion and absorptive nutrition. It has traditionally been considered to be a member of the Labyrinthulae based on its morphology. Its closest relatives were thought to be species in the taxon Diplophrys. Since the genus Diplophrys has been shown to be paraphyletic and S. stercorea has pseudopodia similar to some members of Rhizaria, we examined its relationship with other eukaryotes. We obtained four isolates from the dung of cow and horse, brought each into monoeukaryotic culture, and sequenced their SSU rRNA gene for phylogenetic analysis. All our isolates were shown to form a monophyletic group in the Labyrinthulae, nested in the Amphifiloidea clade. Our results demonstrate that Sorodiplophrys is more closely related to species of the genus Amphifila than to Diplophrys and represents an additional independent origin of sorocarpic multicellularity among eukaryotes. This study represents the first confirmed sorocarpic lifestyle in the Stramenopiles., (© 2016 The Author(s) Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology © 2016 International Society of Protistologists.)
- Published
- 2016
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23. Coprophilic amoebae and flagellates, including Guttulinopsis, Rosculus and Helkesimastix, characterise a divergent and diverse rhizarian radiation and contribute to a large diversity of faecal-associated protists.
- Author
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Bass D, Silberman JD, Brown MW, Pearce RA, Tice AK, Jousset A, Geisen S, and Hartikainen H
- Subjects
- Animals, Biological Evolution, DNA Primers, Eukaryota genetics, Molecular Sequence Data, Phylogeny, Polymerase Chain Reaction methods, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S genetics, Eukaryota physiology, Feces microbiology
- Abstract
A wide diversity of organisms utilize faecal habitats as a rich nutrient source or a mechanism to traverse through animal hosts. We sequenced the 18S rRNA genes of the coprophilic, fruiting body-forming amoeba Guttulinopsis vulgaris and its non-fruiting relatives Rosculus 'ithacus' CCAP 1571/3, R. terrestris n. sp. and R. elongata n. sp. and demonstrate that they are related to the coprophilic flagellate Helkesimastix in a strongly supported, but highly divergent 18S sister clade. PCR primers specific to both clades were used to generate 18S amplicons from a range of environmental and faecal DNA samples. Phylogenetic analysis of the cloned sequences demonstrated a high diversity of uncharacterised sequence types within this clade, likely representing previously described members of the genera Guttulinopsis, Rosculus and Helkesimastix, as well as so-far unobserved organisms. Further, an Illumina MiSeq sequenced set of 18S V4-region amplicons generated from faecal DNAs using universal eukaryote primers showed that core-cercozoan assemblages in faecal samples are as diverse as those found in more conventionally examined habitats. These results reveal many novel lineages, some of which appear to occur preferentially in faecal material, in particular cercomonads and glissomonads. More broadly, we show that faecal habitats are likely untapped reservoirs of microbial eukaryotic diversity., (© 2016 Society for Applied Microbiology and John Wiley & Sons Ltd.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. First multigene analysis of Archamoebae (Amoebozoa: Conosa) robustly reveals its phylogeny and shows that Entamoebidae represents a deep lineage of the group.
- Author
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Pánek T, Zadrobílková E, Walker G, Brown MW, Gentekaki E, Hroudová M, Kang S, Roger AJ, Tice AK, Vlček Č, and Čepička I
- Subjects
- Archamoebae metabolism, Archamoebae ultrastructure, Evolution, Molecular, Gene Transfer, Horizontal genetics, Mitochondria metabolism, Nitrogen Fixation genetics, Sulfates metabolism, Archamoebae classification, Archamoebae genetics, Multigene Family genetics, Phylogeny
- Abstract
Archamoebae is an understudied group of anaerobic free-living or endobiotic protists that constitutes the major anaerobic lineage of the supergroup Amoebozoa. Hitherto, the phylogeny of Archamoebae was based solely on SSU rRNA and actin genes, which did not resolve relationships among the main lineages of the group. Because of this uncertainty, several different scenarios had been proposed for the phylogeny of the Archamoebae. In this study, we present the first multigene phylogenetic analysis that includes members of Pelomyxidae, and Rhizomastixidae. The analysis clearly shows that Mastigamoebidae, Pelomyxidae and Rhizomastixidae form a clade of mostly free-living, amoeboid flagellates, here called Pelobiontida. The predominantly endobiotic and aflagellated Entamoebidae represents a separate, deep-branching lineage, Entamoebida. Therefore, two unique evolutionary events, horizontal transfer of the nitrogen fixation system from bacteria and transfer of the sulfate activation pathway to mitochondrial derivatives, predate the radiation of recent lineages of Archamoebae. The endobiotic lifestyle has arisen at least three times independently during the evolution of the group. We also present new ultrastructural data that clarifies the primary divergence among the family Mastigamoebidae which had previously been inferred from phylogenetic analyses based on SSU rDNA., (Copyright © 2016 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2016
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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