Characterization of Skoliomonas gen. nov., a haloalkaliphilic anaerobe related to barthelonids (Metamonada)

J Eukaryot Microbiol. 2024 Nov-Dec;71(6):e13048. doi: 10.1111/jeu.13048. Epub 2024 Sep 3.

Abstract

Metamonads are a large and exclusively anaerobic group of protists. Additionally, they are one of the three clades proposed to ancestrally possess an "excavate" cell morphology, with a conspicuous ventral groove accompanied by a posterior flagellum with a vane. Here, we cultivate and characterize four anaerobic bacterivorous flagellates from hypersaline and alkaline soda lake environments, which represent a novel clade. Small subunit ribosomal RNA (SSU rRNA) gene phylogenies support recent phylogenomic analyses in placing them as the sister of barthelonids, a group that is itself sister to or deeply branching within Fornicata (Metamonada). The new isolates have a distinctive morphology: the hunchbacked cell body is traversed by a narrow ventral groove ending in a large opening to a conspicuous recurrent cytopharynx. The right margin of the groove is defined by a thin "lip." The posterior flagellum bears a wide ventral-facing vane. The narrow ventral groove and elongate cytopharynx are shared with barthelonids. We describe one isolate as Skoliomonas litria, gen. et sp. nov. Further investigation of their mitochondrial-related organelles (MROs) and detailed ultrastructural studies would be important to understanding the adaptation to anaerobic conditions in Metamonads-especially fornicates-as well as the evolution of the "excavate" cell architecture.

Keywords: alkaliphiles; anaerobes; phylogenetics; protist diversity; protists.

MeSH terms

  • Anaerobiosis
  • Flagella
  • Lakes / parasitology
  • Phylogeny*
  • Sequence Analysis, DNA

Associated data

  • RefSeq/PP416847
  • RefSeq/PP416851