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1.
J Eukaryot Microbiol ; 63(1): 93-9, 2016.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26198754

RESUMO

The peritrich ciliate Epistylis portoalegrensis n. sp. was found in two bodies of freshwater located in Porto Alegre, Southern Brazil. Morphological features were investigated using live and protargol-stained specimens. The zooids presented a vase to cylindrical shape narrowed at the scopula, and a mean size of 131 × 37 µm in vivo. A C-shaped macronucleus lay in the middle of the cell close to a single contractile vacuole. The oral infraciliature was typical for the genus, with all infundibular polykineties composed by three distinct rows of kinetosomes. Colonies are often nonbranched with no lateral stalk, carrying several zooids stemming from a single point. Specimens from the two sampling sites showed identical arrangement of the infraciliature, similar morphometry, identical 18S rDNA sequences, and a single nucleotide difference across the more variable ITS regions. Molecular phylogenetic analyses placed E. portoalegrensis in a well-supported clade containing other Epistylis species, within the order Vorticellida.


Assuntos
Cilióforos/classificação , Água Doce/parasitologia , Corpos Basais/ultraestrutura , Brasil , Cilióforos/genética , Cilióforos/isolamento & purificação , Cilióforos/ultraestrutura , Filogenia , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética , Análise de Sequência de DNA
2.
Eur J Protistol ; 84: 125880, 2022 Jun.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-35286940

RESUMO

Zoothamnium intermedium is an obligate epibiont ciliate and has been found in a diverse array of hosts and environments. Different studies have reported conflicting distribution patterns and host preferences, even though studies in Chesapeake Bay have suggested that the ciliate has a strong host specificity for two calanoid copepod species. We examined the life cycle, host preferences, and ecological conditions conducive to Z. intermedium presence on copepods in Chesapeake Bay, the largest estuary in North America. The York River tributary was sampled biweekly from fall 2014 through summer 2015 for plankton, peritrichs and bacteria in the water column. Bacterial abundance in the water column peaked in fall and late spring, coinciding with increased abundance and species richness of non-epibiont peritrichs. Among the plankton, only the calanoid copepods Acartia tonsa and Centropages hamatus were colonized by Z. intermedium. The peritrich epibiont displayed higher colonization rates on C. hamatus even when A. tonsa was far more abundant. Multivariate correlation analysis of infestation prevalence on A. tonsa showed a strong correlation with dissolved oxygen, salinity and water temperature. Such correlations, along with differences in host species biology, might be driving the seasonality of this epibiotic relationship.


Assuntos
Cilióforos , Copépodes , Oligoimenóforos , Animais , Baías , Plâncton , Água
3.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 12872, 2021 06 18.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-34145372

RESUMO

The protozoan parasite Perkinsus marinus, which causes dermo disease in Crassostrea virginica, is one of the most ecologically important and economically destructive marine pathogens. The rapid and persistent intensification of dermo in the USA in the 1980s has long been enigmatic. Attributed originally to the effects of multi-year drought, climatic factors fail to fully explain the geographic extent of dermo's intensification or the persistence of its intensified activity. Here we show that emergence of a unique, hypervirulent P. marinus phenotype was associated with the increase in prevalence and intensity of this disease and associated mortality. Retrospective histopathology of 8355 archival oysters from 1960 to 2018 spanning Chesapeake Bay, South Carolina, and New Jersey revealed that a new parasite phenotype emerged between 1983 and 1990, concurrent with major historical dermo disease outbreaks. Phenotypic changes included a shortening of the parasite's life cycle and a tropism shift from deeper connective tissues to digestive epithelia. The changes are likely adaptive with regard to the reduced oyster abundance and longevity faced by P. marinus after rapid establishment of exotic pathogen Haplosporidium nelsoni in 1959. Our findings, we hypothesize, illustrate a novel ecosystem response to a marine parasite invasion: an increase in virulence in a native parasite.


Assuntos
Alveolados , Doenças dos Animais/patologia , Doenças dos Animais/parasitologia , Crassostrea/parasitologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Parasita , Animais , Fenótipo
4.
J Eukaryot Microbiol ; 57(5): 415-20, 2010.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-20707878

RESUMO

We have generated 18S rRNA sequences for peritrichs collected in Brazil, including four Opercularia species, two different populations of Epistylis plicatilis (one epibiont and another free-living), and one additional Epistylis species. Our Opercularia species clustered with the previously available Opercularia microdiscum, corroborating the monophyly of this genus. The Epistylis sampled here clustered with previously sequenced species of this genus. The two populations of E. plicatilis collected in Brazil clustered closely together despite their different ecological contexts, whereas both were very divergent from the sample assigned to the same species previously sampled in China. If affirmed by additional morphological corroboration of species assignment, this observation would indicate that samples from different continents morphologically allocated in the same species may in fact belong to distant evolutionary lineages. More broadly, our results support the recognition of two major clades within Peritrichia. Given the robustness of their support, we suggest that these two clades should be formally recognized as orders, and propose the names Vorticellida and Operculariida to designate them. Furthermore, Epistylis species occurred in both orders, tending to occupy basal positions. This suggests that characters used to define this genus may be plesiomorphic for Peritrichia, so that Epistylis may in fact represent an assemblage of basal species retaining ancestral features.


Assuntos
Cilióforos/classificação , Evolução Molecular , Oligoimenóforos/classificação , Oligoimenóforos/isolamento & purificação , Filogenia , Cilióforos/genética , Cilióforos/isolamento & purificação , DNA de Protozoário/genética , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Água Doce/parasitologia , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Oligoimenóforos/genética , RNA Ribossômico 18S/genética
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