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The use of rRNA sequences and fluorescent probes to investigate the phylogenetic positions of the anaerobic ciliate Metopus palaeformis and its archaeobacterial endosymbiont.
Authors:T M Embley  B J Finlay  R H Thomas  P L Dyal
Affiliation:Department of Zoology, Natural History Museum, London, UK.
Abstract:The polymerase chain reaction (PCR) was used to amplify small-subunit ribosomal DNA from the anaerobic ciliated protozoon Metopus palaeformis, and from its uncultured endosymbiotic bacteria. This was accomplished directly from total DNA extracted from protozoa without prior isolation or enrichment for symbiont cells. The double-stranded amplification products were precipitated and directly sequenced using the linear PCR reaction. Fluorescent oligonucleotide probes were designed and used in whole-cell hybridizations to provide direct visual evidence that the sequences originated from the host ciliate and from the endosymbiont. Phylogenetic analysis of the Metopus palaeformis sequence consistently placed it as a deep-branching lineage near the root of the ciliate tree. However, the present data were insufficient to resolve the detailed relationship between Blepharisma and Metopus and thus to determine if the heterotrichs are mono- or paraphyletic. Phylogenetic analysis of the symbiont partial sequence clearly demonstrated that it is an archaeobacterium and that it is closely related to, but distinct from, Methanobacterium formicicum.
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