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1.
Peranema trichophorum (Ehrenberg) Stein, a colorless phagotrophic euglenoid flagellate, has a typically euglenoid microtubular root complement. Striated root components, relatively uncommon in euglenoids, are connected to the basal bodies and to a microtubular root. The flagellar system of Peranema consists of three unequal microtubular roots which extend anteriorly beneath the reservoir membrane, and narrow-band striated roots (periodicity = 29–33 nm) which connect one of the four basal bodies to the movable rodorgan of the feeding apparatus. An inter basal body striated fiber forms a three-way connection between one particular microtubular root, a flagellar basal body, and the striated roots. A striated fibril (periodicity = 18–25 nm), which may be an extension of the striated root system, extends beneath the reservoir membrane. Associated with the striated fibril and the striated roots are cisternae of smooth endoplasmic reticulum.  相似文献   

2.
Significance of predation by protists in aquatic microbial food webs   总被引:31,自引:0,他引:31  
Predation in aquatic microbial food webs is dominated by phagotrophic protists, yet these microorganisms are still understudied compared to bacteria and phytoplankton. In pelagic ecosystems, predaceous protists are ubiquitous, range in size from 2 μm flagellates to >100 μm ciliates and dinoflagellates, and exhibit a wide array of feeding strategies. Their trophic states run the gamut from strictly phagotrophic, to mixotrophic: partly autotrophic and partly phagotrophic, to primarily autotrophic but capable of phagotrophy. Protists are a major source of mortality for both heterotrophic and autotrophic bacteria. They compete with herbivorous meso- and macro-zooplankton for all size classes of phytoplankton. Protist grazing may affect the rate of organic sinking flux from the euphotic zone. Protist excretions are an important source of remineralized nutrients, and of colloidal and dissolved trace metals such as iron, in aquatic systems. Work on predation by protists is being facilitated by methodological advances, e.g., molecular genetic analysis of protistan diversity and application of flow cytometry to study population growth and feeding rates. Examples of new research areas are studies of impact of protistan predation on the community structure of prey assemblages and of chemical communication between predator and prey in microbial food webs. This revised version was published online in August 2006 with corrections to the Cover Date.  相似文献   

3.
Phacus pleuronectes (O. F. Müller) Dujardin is a phototrophic euglenoid with small discoid chloroplasts, a flat rigid body, and longitudinally arranged pellicular strips. The flagellar apparatus consisted of two basal bodies and three flagellar roots typical of many phototrophic euglenoids but also had a large striated fiber that connected the two basal bodies and associated with the ventral root. The three roots, in combination with the dorsal microtubular band, extended anteriorly and formed the major cytoskeletal elements supporting the reservoir membrane and ultimately the pellicle. A cytoplasmic pocket arose in the reservoir/canal transition region. It was supported by the ventral root and a C-shaped band of electron-opaque material that lined the cytoplasmic side of the pocket. A large striated fiber extended from this C-shaped band toward the reservoir membrane. The striated fibers in the basal apparatus and associated with the microtubule-reinforced pocket in P. pleuronecte s appear to be similar to those of the phagotrophic euglenoids.  相似文献   

4.
ABSTRACT. Lentomonas applanatum (syn. Entosiphon applanatum Preisig) is a biflagellate, phagotrophic euglenid found in intertidal salt marshes. Lentomonas applanatum bears a superficial similarity to Entosiphon sulcatum , however, an ultrastructural study of L. applanatum revealed many features that are atypical for other described species of the genus Entosiphon . These features include number and organization of pellicular strips, construction of the feeding apparatus, nature of the flagellar transition zone and flagellar apparatus, and point of flagellar emergence. These differences show that L. applanatum is related more closely to phagotrophic genera such as Ploeotia than to E. sulcatum . The construction of the feeding apparatus and pellicle suggest that L. applanatum has retained many of the pleisiomorphic characters that were present in the earliest euglenids. The presence of similar structures in other related protists may provide important clues as to the evolution of the Euglenida.  相似文献   

5.
The apical complex is one of the defining features of apicomplexan parasites, including the malaria parasite Plasmodium, where it mediates host penetration and invasion. The apical complex is also known in a few related lineages, including several non-parasitic heterotrophs, where it mediates feeding behaviour. The origin of the apical complex is unclear, and one reason for this is that in apicomplexans it exists in only part of the life cycle, and never simultaneously with other major cytoskeletal structures like flagella and basal bodies. Here, we used conventional TEM and serial TEM tomography to reconstruct the three dimensional structure of the apical complex in Psammosa pacifica, a predatory relative of apicomplexans and dinoflagellates that retains the archetype apical complex and the flagellar apparatus simultaneously. The P. pacifica apical complex is associated with the gullet and consists of the pseudoconoid, micronemes, and electron dense vesicles. The pseudoconoid is a convex sheet consisting of eight short microtubules, plus a band made up of microtubules that originate from the flagellar apparatus. The flagellar apparatus consists of three microtubular roots. One of the microtubular roots attached to the posterior basal body is connected to bypassing microtubular strands, which are themselves connected to the extension of the pseudoconoid. These complex connections where the apical complex is an extension of the flagellar apparatus, reflect the ancestral state of both, dating back to the common ancestor of apicaomplexans and dinoflagellates.  相似文献   

6.
Euglenids comprise a distinct clade of flagellates with diverse modes of nutrition, including phagotrophy, osmotrophy and phototrophy. Much of the previous research on euglenids has focused on phototrophic species because of their ecological abundance and significance as indicators for the health of aquatic ecosystems. Although largely understudied, phagotrophic species probably represent the majority of euglenid diversity. Phagotrophic euglenids tend to be either bacterivorous or eukaryovorous and use an elaborate feeding apparatus for capturing prey cells. We characterized the ultrastructure and molecular phylogenetic position of Heteronema scaphurum, a eukaryovorous euglenid collected in freshwater. This species was equipped with a distinct cytoproct through which waste products were eliminated in the form of faecal pellets; a cytoproct has not been reported in any other member of the Euglenida. Heteronema scaphurum also had a novel predatory mode of feeding. The euglenid ensnared and corralled several green algal prey cells (i.e. Chlamydomonas) with hook‐like flagella covered in mucous before engulfing the bundle of prey cells whole. Molecular phylogenetic analyses inferred from small subunit rDNA sequences placed this species with other eukaryovorous euglenids, which was consistent with ultrastructural features associated with the feeding apparatus, flagellar apparatus, extrusomes, and pellicle.  相似文献   

7.
Zooplankton-mediated changes of bacterial community structure   总被引:10,自引:0,他引:10  
Enclosure experiments in the mesotrophic Schöhsee in northern Germany were designed to study the impact of metazooplankton on components of the microbial food web (bacteria, flagellates, ciliates). Zooplankton was manipulated in 500-liter epilimnetic mesocosms so that either Daphnia or copepods were dominating, or metazooplankton was virtually absent. The bacterial community responded immediately to changes in zooplankton composition. Biomass, productivity, and especially the morphology of the bacteria changed drastically in the different treatments. Cascading predation effects on the bacterioplankton were transmitted mainly by phagotrophic protozoans which had changed in species composition and biomass. When Daphnia dominated, protozoans were largely suppressed and the original morphological structure of the bacteria (mainly small rods and cocci) remained throughout the experiment. Dominance of copepods or the absence of metazoan predators resulted in a mass appearance of bacterivorous protists (flagellates and ciliates). They promoted a fast decline of bacterial abundance and a shift to the predominance of morphologically inedible forms, mainly long filaments. After 3 days they formed 80–90% of the bacterial biomass. The results indicate that metazooplankton predation on phagotrophic protozoans is a key mechanism for the regulation of bacterioplankton density and community structure.Correspondence to: K. Jürgens.  相似文献   

8.
C J O'Kelly  M A Farmer  T A Nerad 《Protist》1999,150(2):149-162
Trimastix pyriformis (Klebs 1893) Bernard et al. 1999, is a quadriflagellate, free-living, bacterivorous heterotrophic nanoflagellate from anoxic freshwaters that lacks mitochondria. Monoprotist cultures of this species contained naked trophic cells with anterior flagellar insertion and a conspicuous ventral groove. Bacteria were ingested at the posterior end of the ventral groove, but there was no persistent cytopharyngeal complex. The posterior flagellum resided in this groove, and bore two prominent vanes. A Golgi body (dictyosome) was present adjacent to the flagellar insertion. The kinetid consisted of four basal bodies, four microtubular roots, and associated fibers and bands. Duplicated kinetids, each with four basal bodies and microtubular root templates, appeared at the poles of the open mitotic spindle. Trimastix pyriformis is distinguishable from other Trimastix species on the basis of external morphology, kinetid architecture and the distribution of endomembranes. Trimastix species are most similar to jakobid flagellates, especially Malawimonas jakobiformis, and to species of the retortamonad genus Chilomastix. Retortamonads may have evolved from a Trimastix-like ancestor through loss of "canonical" (easily seen with electron microscopy) endomembrane systems and elaboration of cytoskeletal elements associated with the cytostome/cytopharynx complex.  相似文献   

9.
M A Farmer  R E Triemer 《Bio Systems》1988,21(3-4):283-291
The flagellar apparatus of euglenoids consists of two functional basal bodies, three unequal microtubular roots subtending the reservoir, and a fourth band of microtubules nucleated from one of the flagellar roots and subtending the reservoir membrane. The flagellar apparatus of some euglenoids may contain additional basal bodies, striated roots ("rhizoplasts"), fibrous roots, striated connecting fibers between basal bodies, layered structures, or various electron-dense connective substances. With the possible exception of Petalomonas cantuscygni, nearly all euglenoids are biflagellate although the length of one flagellum may be highly reduced. The flagellar transition zone and number of basal bodies are highly variable among species. In recent years a cytoplasmic pocket that branches off from the reservoir has been discovered. The microtubules of the ventral flagellar root are continuous with the microtubules which line this pocket. Based on positional and structural similarities, this structure is believed to be homologous with the MTR/cytostome of bodonids. Coupled with other ultrastructural and biochemical data, the fine structure of the flagellar apparatus supports the belief that the euglenoid flagellates are descendant from bodonid ancestors.  相似文献   

10.
Phaeomonas parva gen. et sp. nov., a marine photosynthetic stramenopile from oceanic water near the Caroline Islands, is described. Cells are naked and spherical to ovoid. The alga is motile with two laterally inserted flagella during the light period, whereas during the dark period, it absorbs the flagella and rounds up. The anterior (immature, No. 2) long flagellum possesses tubular tripartite mastigonemes. The posterior (mature, No. 1) short flagellum is smooth and has autofluorescence at the base. The cupshaped, yellowish‐brown chloroplast occupies the posterior half of the cell, and a pyrenoid occurs in the inner cavity of the cup‐shaped chloroplast. The flagellar apparatus has several unusual features. Two basal plates and a two‐gyred proximal helix in the flagellar transitional region may suggest that P. parva is related to the Pelagophyceae, Dictyochophyceae and Sulcochrysis biplastida, a photosynthetic stramenopile of uncertain taxonomic position. The R3 and R4 roots form a loop that resembles phagotrophic chrysophytes. However, this resemblance is superficial because Phaeomonas is not phagotrophic, its R3 root has a different number of microtubules and its R3 root does not split to form a food‐uptake mouth. Phaeomonas has a ‘bypassing root’, which is found only with the Phaeophyceae, Giraudyopsis stellifera (Chrysomerophyceae), and Ankylochrysis lutea (probably a member of the Pelagophyceae). The taxonomic position of P. parva could not be determined solely from ultrastructural features. However, molecular phylogeny and biochemical analyses (published separately) strongly supported a relationship between P. parva and four other monotypic strameno‐piles, Glossomastix, Pinguiochrysis, Pinguiococcus and Polypodochrysis. Although these algae are morphologically distinct, they have unusually high percentages of polyunsaturated fatty acids, especially eicosapentoic acid. This unusual assemblage of stramenopiles is classified in a new class, the Pinguiophyceae (published separately), and P. parva is its only biflagellate member.  相似文献   

11.
The flagellar apparatus and presumptive vestigial feeding apparatuses of a cold-water, photosynthetic, quadriflagellate euglenoid is described. The organism possesses two similar sets of flagella each consisting of one short and one long flagellum. Each pair of flagella is associated with three microtubular roots for a total of six roots in the basal apparatus. At the level of the ventral basal bodies, each intermediate root is nine-membered, while the ventral roots are composed of eight to nine microtubules. Only one of the ventral roots lines the single microtubule reinforced pocket. A four-membered dorsal root attaches to each dorsal basal body, and at the level of the reservoir each gives rise to a dorsal band. An additional bundle of microtubules, not arising from the microtubular roots of the basal apparatus, begins posterior to the basal apparatus as a small group of a few microtubules and extends anteriorly on the right ventral side of the reservoir ending at the canal. At the level of the stigma, the microtubules are organized into a multi-layered bundle that continues to increase in size and eventually splits to form two bundles at the level of the canal. We postulate that these bundles may represent the remnants of a rod-and-vane-type feeding apparatus like that found in many phagotrophic euglenoids.  相似文献   

12.
ABSTRACT The literature on discriminant feeding by planktonic protozoans using geometric and nongeometric criteria is reviewed with emphasis on recent studies that indicate phagotrophic protists can use information other than particle size or shape to sort among potential prey. Sufficient data are available for ciliates, aplastidic microflagellates, and phagotrophic dinoflagellates. Numerous representative taxa of all three groups have chemosensory capabilities, either to specific chemicals or to prey exudates, that modify their motility patterns resulting in aggregation or dispersal. Representatives of all three groups also have specific prey preferences. These considerations imply, but do not prove, selectivity in feeding through use of chemical cues. Although prey geometry is clearly a first-order determinant of ingestion through passive mechanical selection, recent studies illustrate that planktonic ciliates and flagellates can use other criteria to discriminate among prey. the evidence clearly implicates use of chemical cues, most likely perceived through contact chemoreception. Filter feeders as well as raptors have such abilities indicating that feeding mechanisms per se do not imply limitations on feeding behavior. Evidence of considerable flexibility and complexity in chemoperceptive feeding suggests that we have only glimpsed the more detailed features of feeding behavior in aquatic protozoans.  相似文献   

13.
Flagellate grazing on bacteria in a small dystrophic lake   总被引:9,自引:9,他引:0  
Fluorescent beads were used to determine the grazing on bacteria by heterotrophic and mixotrophic flagellates in a highly humic (water colour 300–600 mg Pt l–1) small lake. In summer phagotrophic flagellates constituted about three quarters of the numbers of phytoplankton (including heterotrophic or mixotrophic flagellates) in the uppermost epilimnion. Due to their small size their respective contribution to the biomass was about one quarter. The most important phagotrophic species were Ochromonas sp., and Chromulina spp. which ingested 75–203% of their body carbon per day from bacteria.In view of the abundance and biomass of phagotrophic and mixotrophic flagellates and their very high growth potential, they clearly play a significant role in the food chains of this lake. In addition to providing energy, bacteriovory also represents an important supply of inorganic and organic nutrients under nutrient limiting conditions.  相似文献   

14.
An isolate of the very small marine dinoflagellate Biecheleriopsis adriatica gen. et sp. nov. (12–15 µm long) has been examined by light, scanning and transmission electron microscopy, combined with partial sequencing of nuclear-encoded large subunit rRNA. Biecheleriopsis is a genus of thin-walled dinoflagellates, related to Biecheleria and the taxonomic group of Polarella , Protodinium and Symbiodinium , the latter comprising mainly symbionts of marine invertebrates. The mixotrophic Biecheleriopsis adriatica is characterized by: (i) a special type of apical furrow apparatus; (ii) an eyespot of Type E sensu Moestrup and Daugbjerg; (iii) an unusual type of pyrenoid; and (iv) a spiny resting cyst. Thin sections showed the presence a fibrous connection between the flagellar apparatus and a finger-like extension of the nucleus ('rhizoplast'). It forms a physical connection between the flagella and the nucleus. This unusual structure has previously been considered to characterize the 'true' gymnodinioids, represented by Gymnodinium sensu Daugbjerg et al. and related forms. However, the apical furrow apparatus and the nuclear envelope of Biecheleriopsis are woloszynskioid rather than gymnodinioid. The related genus Biecheleria lacks a rhizoplast, and it also lacks a 51-base pair fragment of domain D2 of the large subunit rRNA, which is present in other woloszynskioids. A physical connection between the flagellar apparatus and the nucleus mediated by a fibrous structure is known in other groups of protists, for example, the 'rhizoplast' of many heterokont flagellates, some green algal flagellates, etc. The phylogenetic significance of a rhizoplast in two groups of dinoflagellates that are only distantly related is presently difficult to assess.  相似文献   

15.
The flagellar root system of Entosiphon sulcatum (Dujardin) Stein (Euglenophyceae) is described and compared with kinetoplastid and other euglenoid systems. An asymmetric pattern of three microtubular roots, one between the two flagellar basal bodies and one on either side (here called the intermediate, dorsal, and ventral roots), is consistent within the euglenoid flagellates studied thus far. The dorsal root is associated with the basal body of the anterior flagellum (F1) and lies on the left dorsal side of the basal body complex. Originating between the two flagellar basal bodies, and associated with the basal body of the trailing flagellum (F2), the intermediate root is morphologically distinguished by fibrils interconnecting the individual microtubules to one another and to the over lying reservoir membrane. The intermediate root is often borne on a ridge projecting into the reservoir. The ventral root originates near the F2 basal body and lies on the right ventral side of the cell. Fibrillar connections link the membrane of F2 with the reservoir membrane at the reservoircanal transition level. A large cross-banded fiber joins the two flagellar basal bodies, and a series of smaller striated fibers links the anterior accessory and flagellar basal bodies. Large nonstriated fibers extend from the basal body complex posteriorly into the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

16.
An autofluorescent substance occurs in the flagella of flagellate cells of the golden and brown algae. It is localized only in the posterior (short) flagellum and could not be detected in the anterior (long) one. It showed maximum fluorescence emission at 515–520 nm upon excitation of 440 nm; therefore, it is considered to be a flavin. This substance is distributed widely among flagellate cells of golden and brown algae irrespective of their nature (vegetative cells, zoospores, gametes, or sperm). It is absent, however, in some brown algal zoospores and sperm which lack an eyespot and flagellar swelling and are considered to lack phototaxis. Because the flagellar swelling in the posterior flagellum is a presumptive photoreceptor for phototaxis in these groups, it is suggested that the flavin located in the posterior flagellum acts as a photoreceptor pigment in phototaxis.  相似文献   

17.
The flagellar root system of Entosiphon sulcatum (Dujardin) Stein (Euglenophyceae) is described and compared with kinetoplastid and other euglenoid systems. An asymmetric pattern of three microtubular roots, one between the two flagellar basal bodies and one on either side (here called the intermediate, dorsal, and ventral roots), is consistent within the euglenoid flagellates studied thus far. The dorsal root is associated with the basal body of the anterior flagellum (F1) and lies on the left dorsal side of the basal body complex. Originating between the two flagellar basal bodies, and associated with the basal body of the trailing flagellum (F2), the intermediate root is morphologically distinguished by fibrils interconnecting the individual microtubules to one another and to the overlying reservoir membrane. The intermediate root is often borne on a ridge projecting into the reservoir. The ventral root originates near the F2 basal body and lies on the right ventral side of the cell. Fibrillar connections link the membrane of F2 with the reservoir membrane at the reservoir-canal transition level. A large cross-banded fiber joins the two flagellar basal bodies, and a series of smaller striated fibers links the anterior accessory and flagellar basal bodies. Large nonstriated fibers extend from the basal body complex posteriorly into the cytoplasm.  相似文献   

18.
Most flagellates with hispid flagella, that is, flagella with rigid filamentous hairs (mastigonemes), swim in the direction of the flagellar wave propagation with an anterior position of the flagellum. Previous analysis was based on planar wave propagation showing that the mastigonemes pull fluid along the flagellar axis. In the present study, we investigate the flagellar motions and swimming patterns for two flagellates with hispid flagella: Paraphysomonas vestita and Pteridomonas danica. Studies were carried out using normal and high-speed video recording, and particles were added to visualize flow around cells generating feeding currents. When swimming or generating flow, P. vestita was able to pull fluid normal to, and not just along, the flagellum, implying the use of the mastigonemes in an as yet un-described way. When the flagellum made contact with food particles, it changed the flagellar waveform so that the particle was fanned towards the ingestion area, suggesting mechano-sensitivity of the mastigonemes. Pteridomonas danica was capable of more complex swimming than previously described for flagellated protists. This was associated with control of the flagellar beat as well as an ability to bend the plane of the flagellar waveform.  相似文献   

19.
A flavin-like green autofluorescent substance is noticed to occur in one of the flagella of flagellated cells in the Phaeophyceae, Chrysophyceae, Synurophyceae, Xanthophyceae and Prymnesiophyceae. In the phaeophycean swarmers the autofluorescence occurs in the posterior flagellum throughout its length. It is considered to be involved in the photoreception of phototaxis, since it almost always occurs in the swarmers which have a flagellar swelling and stigma and show phototaxis. In the phaeophycean swarmers, the stigma is shown to act as a concave reflector mirror focusing the reflection light onto the flagellar swelling. In the action spectrum studies, phaeophycean swarmers showed phototaxis between 370 and 520 nm, having two major peaks at 420 or 430 nm and 450 or 460 nm. Their responses were true phototactic and not photophobic. Rotation of the swarmer was shown to be essential in the photoreception ofEctocarpus gametes. Recipient of the Botanical Society Award for Young Scientists, 1991.  相似文献   

20.
The morphology of in vitro grown lower trypanosomatids L. peterhoffi was studied by means of electron microscopy. The flagellates from both liquid and solid culture media are represented by uninucleate cells of two structural types. Type I flagellates are characterized by dense cytoplasm enriched with numerous ribosomes. Type II flagellates are most abundant in the cultures; they display a less dense cytoplasm and fewer ribosomes. The flagella of L. peterhoffi of both types form enlargements, which are most expressed at the outlet of the flagellar pocket. The nuclei of some cells contain twisted threads about 10 nm in diameter. L. peterhoffi from the liquid media usually possess long, narrow and curved flagellar pockets. On the solid medium, amoeboid and hemispherical colonies composed of both uninucleate and giant multinucleate cells are formed. In these cells the flagellar pockets are usually short and straight. Outside the flagellar pocket, the axoneme often becomes looped in the flagellar enlargements of the colonial uninucleate cells.  相似文献   

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