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Bigyra

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Bigyra (from Latin bi- 'twice', and gyrus 'circle')[1] is a possibly paraphyletic phylum of heterotrophic organisms belonging to the Stramenopile lineage.[5][2] It includes the groups Bicosoecida, Opalinata and Labyrinthulea, as well as several small clades that were initially discovered through environmental DNA samples: Nanomonadea, Placididea, Opalomonadea and Eogyrea.[3][6]

Diversity and ecology

Bigyra is a widely distributed group of stramenopile lineages, characterized by an anterior flagellum with tripartite hairs. It contains well-known ecological groups such as the fungi-like slime nets, the flagellate bicosoecids and the opalines.[7]

Slime nets

The slime nets (known as Labyrinthulea, Labyrinthulomycetes or Labyrinthulomycota) are fungus-like heterotrophic, colorless or yellowish protists that absorb nutrients in an osmotrophic or phagotrophic manner, either as free-living amoebae or as networks of anastomosing cytoplasmic threads that extend from a bothrosome. They are typically saprotrophic decomposers of the detrital food web, making organic matter more accessible to grazing protists. Some are parasitic, and others feed on bacteria. They are cosmopolitan, ubiquitous in marine, freshwater and estuarine environments, associated with algae, marine plants and detritus.[7]

Opalines

The opalines (known as Opalinata) are a diverse assemblage of modified unicellular protists, consisting of three closely-related groups: proteromonads, opalinids and Blastocystis. They inhabit the intestines of various animals and can be found in all continents.[7]

Bicosoecids

The bicosoecids (known as Bicosoecida) are a small group of marine or freshwater heterotrophic flagellates that feed on bacteria. Their classification has changed multiple times over the years,[8] and is still an unresolved issue.[9]

History and phylogeny

Origin

Bigyra was first described in 1997 by Thomas Cavalier-Smith, as a phylum within Heterokonta that contained three subphyla: 1) the walled saprotrophic Pseudofungi, 2) the non-phagotrophic gut-symbiotic Opalinata, and 3) the phagotrophic zooflagellate Developayella, which received its own subphylum Bigyromonada. These groups would have originated from a common ancestor that had a double ciliary transition zone helix as its synapomorphy. The common ancestor would have evolved from photosynthetic heterokonts, but would have secondarily lost its plastids, as opposed to the photosynthetic Ochrophyta which retain them. Bigyra was, at the time, postulated as a monophyletic group (or clade), followed by a paraphyletic grade of ochrophyte classes.[1][10]

Heterokonta Bigyra Pseudofungi

Oomycetes

Hyphochytrea

Bigyromonadea

Opalinata

Proteromonadea

Opalinea

Limnistia

Sarcinochrysia

Dictyochia

Fucistia

Diatomeae

Sagenista

Taxonomic modifications

Posterior phylogenetic analyses that used 18S rRNA genes revealed that Pseudofungi and Bigyromonadea were more closely related to Ochrophyta than they were to Opalinata, meaning that the synapomorphy of a double helix could have been present in the common ancestor of all heterokonts. This rendered Bigyra paraphyletic. Consequently, Bigyra was revised and modified in 2006 to comprise a different set of three subphyla: 1) Opalozoa, a previously polyphyletic diverse phylum that was modified to only include Opalinata and Nucleohelea; 2) Bicoecea, containing the bicosoecids; and 3) Sagenista, containing the osmotrophic Labyrinthulea. The phylogeny of Bigyra, however, could not be resolved, and its monophyly was weakly supported. The weak support was thought to be caused by all three bigyran lineages diverging from each other very soon after the separation from other heterokonts; this deep branching makes it difficult to find the exact branching order of bigyran clades.[2]

Heterokonta Ochrophyta

Khakista

Limnista

Pseudofungi

Bigyromonadea

Hyphochytrea

Oomycetes

Opalozoa

Nucleohelea

Opalinata

Bicoecea

Sagenista

Bigyra

Bigyra was modified again in 2013 after the discovery of several heterokont clades called MAST (‘marine stramenopiles’), recovered through environmental rDNA sequencing. The subphylum Opalozoa assimilated the bicosoecids in an infraphylum Bikosia, while another new infraphylum Placidozoa assimilated the Opalinata and an array of new clades: Placididea, Nanomonadea (MAST-3) and Opalomonadea (MAST-12), all three classified under the paraphyletic taxon Wobblata. The subphylum Sagenista, on the other hand, received a new class Eogyrea that was composed of several MAST lineages not yet described.[3] Later, one of the MAST clades within Eogyrea would be described as Pseudophyllomitus (MAST-6).[6]

Stramenopiles Gyrista

Ochrophyta

Pseudofungi

Opalozoa Placidozoa Opalinata

Opalinea

Blastocystea

Opalomonadea

Nanomonadea

Placididea

Bikosea

Sagenista

Eogyrea

Labyrinthulea

Current phylogeny

Despite modern large-scale phylogenomic analyses that use bigger taxon sampling, the validity of Bigyra remains uncertain. The positions of the deep-branching bigyran clades are not consistent among the published studies, and not all the clades are well-represented by genomic and transcriptomic data.[6] Several studies support the monophyly of Bigyra through multi-gene phylogenetic analysis and a rich taxon sampling.[6][11] There is also support for its paraphyly from more recent phylogenetic studies of the 2020s decade.[12][13]

Taxonomy

The present classification of Bigyra is as follows:[4][11]

References

  1. ^ a b c Cavalier-Smith T (1998). "A revised six-kingdom system of life". Biol Rev Camb Philos Soc. 73 (3): 203–66. doi:10.1111/j.1469-185X.1998.tb00030.x. PMID 9809012. S2CID 6557779.
  2. ^ a b c Cavalier-Smith T, Chao EE (April 2006). "Phylogeny and megasystematics of phagotrophic heterokonts (kingdom Chromista)". J. Mol. Evol. 62 (4): 388–420. doi:10.1007/s00239-004-0353-8. PMID 16557340. S2CID 29567514.
  3. ^ a b c d e Cavalier-Smith, Thomas; Scoble, Josephine Margaret (2013). "Phylogeny of Heterokonta: Incisomonas marina, a uniciliate gliding opalozoan related to Solenicola (Nanomonadea), and evidence that Actinophryida evolved from raphidophytes". European Journal of Protistology. 49 (3): 328–353. doi:10.1016/j.ejop.2012.09.002. PMID 23219323.
  4. ^ a b Adl SM, Bass D, Lane CE, Lukeš J, Schoch CL, Smirnov A, Agatha S, Berney C, Brown MW, Burki F, Cárdenas P, Čepička I, Chistyakova L, del Campo J, Dunthorn M, Edvardsen B, Eglit Y, Guillou L, Hampl V, Heiss AA, Hoppenrath M, James TY, Karnkowska A, Karpov S, Kim E, Kolisko M, Kudryavtsev A, Lahr DJG, Lara E, Le Gall L, Lynn DH, Mann DG, Massana R, Mitchell EAD, Morrow C, Park JS, Pawlowski JW, Powell MJ, Richter DJ, Rueckert S, Shadwick L, Shimano S, Spiegel FW, Torruella G, Youssef N, Zlatogursky V, Zhang Q (2019). "Revisions to the Classification, Nomenclature, and Diversity of Eukaryotes". Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology. 66 (1): 4–119. doi:10.1111/jeu.12691. PMC 6492006. PMID 30257078.
  5. ^ Riisberg I, Orr RJ, Kluge R, et al. (May 2009). "Seven gene phylogeny of heterokonts". Protist. 160 (2): 191–204. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2008.11.004. PMID 19213601.
  6. ^ a b c d Thakur, Rabindra; Shiratori, Takashi; Ishida, Ken-ichiro (2019). "Taxon-rich Multigene Phylogenetic Analyses Resolve the Phylogenetic Relationship Among Deep-branching Stramenopiles". Protist. 170 (5): 125682. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2019.125682. ISSN 1434-4610.
  7. ^ a b c d e f Archibald, John M.; Simpson, Alastair G. B.; Slamovits, Claudio H., eds. (2017). Handbook of the Protists (2 ed.). Springer International Publishing. pp. ix. ISBN 978-3-319-28147-6.
  8. ^ Karpov SA, Sogin ML, Silberman JD (2001). "Rootlet homology, taxonomy, and phylogeny of bicosoecids based on 18S rRNA gene sequences". Protistology. 2 (1): 34–47.
  9. ^ Schoenle A, Hohlfeld M, Rybarski A, Sachs M, Freches E, Wiechmann K, Nitsche F, Arndt H (2022). "Cafeteria in extreme environments: Investigations on C. burkhardae and three new species from the Atacama Desert and the deep ocean". European Journal of Protistology. 85: 125905. doi:10.1016/j.ejop.2022.125905.
  10. ^ Cavalier-Smith T (1998). "Sagenista and Bigyra, two phyla of heterotrophic heterokont chromists". Archiv für Protistenkunde. 148 (3): 253–267. doi:10.1016/S0003-9365(97)80006-1.
  11. ^ a b Cavalier-Smith, Thomas (2017). "Kingdom Chromista and its eight phyla: a new synthesis emphasising periplastid protein targeting, cytoskeletal and periplastid evolution, and ancient divergences". Protoplasma. 255 (1): 297–357. doi:10.1007/s00709-017-1147-3. PMC 5756292. PMID 28875267.
  12. ^ Tan MH, Loke S, Croft LJ, Gleason FH, Lange L, Pilgaard B, Trevathan-Tackett SM (2021). "First Genome of Labyrinthula sp., an Opportunistic Seagrass Pathogen, Reveals Novel Insight into Marine Protist Phylogeny, Ecology and CAZyme Cell-Wall Degradation". Microbial Ecology. 82: 498–511. doi:10.1007/s00248-020-01647-x.
  13. ^ Cho A, Tikhonenkov DV, Hehenberger E, Karnkowska A, Mylnikov AP, Keeling PJ (2022). "Monophyly of diverse Bigyromonadea and their impact on phylogenomic relationships within stramenopiles" (PDF). Molecular Phylogenetics and Evolution. 171 (107468): 107468. doi:10.1016/j.ympev.2022.107468. ISSN 1055-7903. S2CID 247815732.
  14. ^ Shiratori, Takashi; Thakur, Rabindra; Ishida, Ken-ichiro (2017). "Pseudophyllomitus vesiculosus (Larsen and Patterson 1990) Lee, 2002, a Poorly Studied Phagotrophic Biflagellate is the First Characterized Member of Stramenopile Environmental Clade MAST-6". Protist. 168 (4): 439–451. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2017.06.004. ISSN 1434-4610. PMID 28822908.

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Bigyra: Brief Summary

provided by wikipedia EN

Bigyra (from Latin bi- 'twice', and gyrus 'circle') is a possibly paraphyletic phylum of heterotrophic organisms belonging to the Stramenopile lineage. It includes the groups Bicosoecida, Opalinata and Labyrinthulea, as well as several small clades that were initially discovered through environmental DNA samples: Nanomonadea, Placididea, Opalomonadea and Eogyrea.

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cc-by-sa-3.0
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original
visit source
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wikipedia EN