Malawimonas
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''Malawimonas'' is a
Loukozoa Loukozoa (+ Ancyromonads) (From Greek ''loukos'': groove) is a proposed taxon used in some classifications of eukaryotes, consisting of the Metamonada and Malawimonadea. Ancyromonads are closely related to this group, as sister of the entire grou ...
genus, possible sister of the
Podiata Podiates (Cavalier-Smith, 2012, excl. Ancyromonadida) are a proposed clade containing the Amorphea (incl. Opisthokonta, Amoebozoa, apusomonads and breviates) and the organisms now assigned to the clade CRuMs. Ancyromonadida does not appear to hav ...
.


History of the discovery of Malawimonads

In 1993, Charles J O’ Kelly studied the jakobid groups flagellates and implications for the early diversification of eukaryotes and recognized that ''Jakoba, Reclimonas,'' and ''Histonia'' or often refer as “core jakobids” were morphologically somewhat similar. Interestingly, they included an unnamed and undescribed free-swimming, flagellate, and also groove- bearing cell. During the early study, these cells were thought to be a member from ''Jakoba'' due to the external morphology features that resembles ''Jakoba libera'' in terms of lack of cell covering, sessile trophic stages, swimming in a similar manner and sharing the tendency for the anterior flagellum to form a “crook. However, later discovery found that this species seems to not fit and can not be assigned to the genus ''Jakoba'', nor to any other genus of Jakobids, because of their discoidal mitochondrial cristae, which is different from Jakoba that have irregularly flattened, and the other Jakobids member have tubular mitochondrial cristae. This undescribed organism was later described formally as ''Malawimonas jakobiformis'' and placed in its own new family Malawimonadidae, a bacterivorous heterotrophic isolated from the Malawi shore of
Lake Nyasa Lake Malawi, also known as Lake Nyasa in Tanzania and Lago Niassa in Mozambique, is an African Great Lake and the southernmost lake in the East African Rift system, located between Malawi, Mozambique and Tanzania. It is the fifth largest fre ...
(eastern Africa). Only more than a decade later, a related organism has been studied under several studies that revolved around the phylogenetic positions of the Jakobids and Cercozoans group under the names ''Malawimonas californiana'', but there are no formal descriptions included.


Characterization

''Malawimonas'' share some common features with the jakobids and other
Excavata Excavata is a major supergroup of unicellular organisms belonging to the domain Eukaryota. It was first suggested by Simpson and Patterson in 1999 and introduced by Thomas Cavalier-Smith in 2002 as a formal taxon. It contains a variety of free- ...
group members by having a conspicuous feeding grove on the ventral side and two flagellates. The overall cytoskeleton of ''Malawimonas'' resembles ''
Carpediemonas ''Carpediemonas'' is genus of Metamonada, and belongs to the group Excavata. This organism is a unicellular flagellated eukaryote that was first discovered in substrate samples from the Great Barrier Reef. ''Carpediemonas'' can be found in ana ...
,'' typical Excavata belonging to the anaerobic
Metamonad The metamonads are microscopic eukaryotic organisms, a large group of flagellate amitochondriate Loukozoa. Their composition is not entirely settled, but they include the retortamonads, diplomonads, and possibly the parabasalids and oxymonads a ...
a clade and closely related to
Diplomonad The diplomonads (Greek for "two units") are a group of flagellates, most of which are parasitic. They include ''Giardia duodenalis'', which causes giardiasis in humans. They are placed among the metamonads, and appear to be particularly close ...
s and Retormonads. ''Malawimonas jakobiformis'' characterized by a uninucleate, biflagellate, heterotrophic, “naked” cell, where neither scales nor lorica was present. Observation of the ultrastructure revealed a substantial glycocalyx as a surface coat. The cells of ''Malawimonas'' are usually slender, and the shape is plastic and often deformed by influences such as coverslip pressure or food they digest. The two flagella are approximately 1- 1.5 times as long as the cell body and are more or less equal length. The anterior flagellum has a “crook” shape where the posterior flagellum is appresed but not attached to the ventral cell surface. Cells swim in straight lines a and turn longitudinal axes as they move. The posterior flagellar vane of ''Malawimonas jakobiformis'' arises from a clearly defined point on the ventral surface of the flagellum. In contrast, the other jakobids’ vane has a diffuse origin along the dorsal surface.


Malawimonas, Jakobids, and Mitochondrial Origin

The early study of molecular investigations revealed that the genome of ''
Reclinomonas ''Reclinomonas'' is a monotypic genus of jakobid eukaryotes containing the single species ''Reclinomonas americana''.Simpson, A. 2008''Reclinomonas'' Flavin & Nerad 1993. ''Reclinomonas americana'' Flavin & Nerad 1993.Version 05. The Tree of Life ...
americana'', ''Jakoba libera'' and ''Malawimonas jakobiformis'' collectively represent the most eubacterial-like mitochondrial DNAs yet discovered among all eukaryotes. Jakobids group have all the basic forms of mitochondrial cristae known in eukaryotes. The mitochondrial shape has been seen as a strongly conserved character and is used to delimit the deepest evolutionary division within eukaryotes.


Malawimonas position within Eukaryotes

A study based on alpha and beta- tubulin phylogenies found that ''Malawimonas jakobiformis'' occupied a relatively basal position in the plant-protists superclade and showed the distinctness from the “core jakobids”. Molecular phylogenies have not resolved the position of malawimonads within eukaryotes. Analyses of the small number of nucleus-encoded genes often place malawimonads as close relatives of metamonads. Since 2016, most phylogenomic shows place malawimonads separately from other excavates. Phylogenesis of SSU rDNA, tubulins, 5-7 nucleus-encoded proteins, and phylogenetic analyses conclude that malawimonads are not specifically related to jakobids. The similarities between jakobids and malawimonads apparently reflect the ancestral morphology of excavate protists, or perhaps convergence, and not a close phylogenetic relationship.


References


External links


Tree of Life: Malawimonas
{{Taxonbar, from=Q20672095 Excavata genera Scotokaryotes