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Table S4. Abundance of the transcripts encoding MRO protein candidates and acetyl-CoA synthases (ACS1-3) among Barthelona sp. Strain PAP020, Dysnectes brevis, and Kipferlia bialata. from Barthelonids represent a deep-branching metamonad clade with mitochondrion-related organelles predicted to generate no ATP

Authors :
Euki Yazaki
Keitaro Kume
Shiratori, Takashi
Eglit, Yana
Tanifuji, Goro
Harada, Ryo
Simpson, Alastair G. B.
Ken-Ichiro Ishida
Hashimoto, Tetsuo
Inagaki, Yuji
Publication Year :
2020
Publisher :
The Royal Society, 2020.

Abstract

We here report the phylogenetic position of barthelonids, small anaerobic flagellates previously examined using light microscopy alone. Barthelona spp. were isolated from geographically distinct regions and we established five laboratory strains. Transcriptomic data generated from one Barthelona strain (PAP020) were used for large-scale, multi-gene phylogenetic (phylogenomic) analyses. Our analyses robustly placed strain PAP020 at the base of the Fornicata clade, indicating that barthelonids represent a deep-branching Metamonad clade. Considering the anaerobic/microaerophilic nature of barthelonids and preliminary electron microscopy observations on strain PAP020, we suspected that barthelonids possess functionally and structurally reduced mitochondria (i.e. mitochondrion-related organelles or MROs). The metabolic pathways localized in the MRO of strain PAP020 were predicted based on its transcriptomic data and compared with those in the MROs of fornicates. We here propose that strain PAP020 is incapable of generating ATP in the MRO, as no mitochondrial/MRO enzymes involved in substrate-level phosphorylation were detected. Instead, we detected the putative cytosolic ATP-generating enzyme (acetyl-CoA synthetase), suggesting that strain PAP020 depends on ATP generated in the cytosol. We propose two separate losses of substrate-level phosphorylation from the MRO in the clade containing barthelonids and (other) fornicates.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....1a3d62f16db858aaabbbb0136c11235b
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.12833837.v1