keyword
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38574508/circular-extrachromosomal-dna-in-euglena-gracilis-under-normal-and-stress-conditions
#21
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Natalia Gumińska, Paweł Hałakuc, Bożena Zakryś, Rafał Milanowski
Extrachromosomal circular DNA (eccDNA) enhances genomic plasticity, augmenting its coding and regulatory potential. Advances in high-throughput sequencing have enabled the investigation of these structural variants. Although eccDNAs have been investigated in numerous taxa, they remained understudied in euglenids. Therefore, we examined eccDNAs predicted from Illumina sequencing data of Euglena gracilis Z SAG 1224-5/25, grown under optimal photoperiod and exposed to UV irradiation. We identified approximately 1000 unique eccDNA candidates, about 20% of which were shared across conditions...
March 29, 2024: Protist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38573881/mutualism-on-the-edge-understanding-the-paramecium-chlorella-symbiosis
#22
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Benjamin H Jenkins
Exploring the mechanisms that underpin symbiosis requires an understanding of how these complex interactions are maintained in diverse model systems. The ciliate protist, Paramecium bursaria, offers a valuable insight into how emergent endosymbiotic interactions have evolved.
April 2024: PLoS Biology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38572231/protist-communities-of-microbial-mats-from-the-extreme-environments-of-five-saline-andean-lagoons-at-high-altitudes-in-the-atacama-desert
#23
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Eduardo Acosta, Frank Nitsche, Cristina Dorador, Hartmut Arndt
INTRODUCTION: Heterotrophic protists colonizing microbial mats have received little attention over the last few years, despite their importance in microbial food webs. A significant challenge originates from the fact that many protists remain uncultivable and their functions remain poorly understood. METHODS: Metabarcoding studies of protists in microbial mats across high-altitude lagoons of different salinities (4.3-34 practical salinity units) were carried out to provide insights into their vertical stratification at the millimeter scale...
2024: Frontiers in Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569936/structure-function-analysis-of-plant-g-protein-regulatory-mechanisms-identifies-key-g%C3%AE-rgs-protein-interactions
#24
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Maria Daniela Torres-Rodriguez, Soon Goo Lee, Swarup Roy Choudhury, Rabindranath Paul, Balaji Selvam, Diwakar Shukla, Joseph M Jez, Sona Pandey
Heterotrimeric GTP-binding protein alpha subunit (Gα) and its cognate regulator of G-protein signaling (RGS) protein transduce signals in eukaryotes spanning protists, amoeba, animals, fungi, and plants. The core catalytic mechanisms of the GTPase activity of Gα and the interaction interface with RGS for acceleration of GTP hydrolysis seem to be conserved across these groups; however, the RGS gene is under low selective pressure in plants, resulting in its frequent loss. Our current understanding of the structural basis of Gα:RGS regulation in plants has been shaped by Arabidopsis Gα, (AtGPA1), which has a cognate RGS protein...
April 1, 2024: Journal of Biological Chemistry
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38569353/redescription-and-molecular-phylogeny-of-the-freshwater-metopid-castula-strelkowi-jankowski-1964-from-the-czech-republic-and-synonymization-of-pileometopus-with-castula
#25
JOURNAL ARTICLE
William Bourland, Ondřej Pomahač, Ivan Čepička
The relationships of the mainly free living, obligately anaerobic ciliated protists belonging to order Metopida continue to be clarified and now comprise three families: Metopidae, Tropidoatractidae, and Apometopidae. The most species-rich genus of the Metopidae, Metopus has undergone considerable subdivision into new genera in recent years as more taxa are characterized by modern morphologic and molecular methods. The genus, Castula, was established to accommodate setae-bearing species previously assigned to Metopus: C...
March 29, 2024: Protist
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38568970/a-mutualistic-bacterium-rescues-a-green-alga-from-an-antagonist
#26
JOURNAL ARTICLE
David Carrasco Flores, Vivien Hotter, Trang Vuong, Yu Hou, Yuko Bando, Kirstin Scherlach, Bertille Burgunter-Delamare, Ron Hermenau, Anna J Komor, Prasad Aiyar, Magdalena Rose, Severin Sasso, Hans-Dieter Arndt, Christian Hertweck, Maria Mittag
Photosynthetic protists, known as microalgae, are key contributors to primary production on Earth. Since early in evolution, they coexist with bacteria in nature, and their mode of interaction shapes ecosystems. We have recently shown that the bacterium Pseudomonas protegens acts algicidal on the microalga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. It secretes a cyclic lipopeptide and a polyyne that deflagellate, blind, and lyse the algae [P. Aiyar et al. , Nat. Commun. 8 , 1756 (2017) and V. Hotter et al. , Proc. Natl. Acad...
April 9, 2024: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38564734/myst-regulates-dna-repair-and-forms-a-nua4-like-complex-in-the-malaria-parasite-plasmodium-falciparum
#27
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Mohammad Kalamuddin, Ahmad Rushdi Shakri, Chengqi Wang, Hui Min, Xiaolian Li, Liwang Cui, Jun Miao
Histone lysine acetyltransferase MYST-associated NuA4 complex is conserved from yeast to humans and plays key roles in cell cycle regulation, gene transcription, and DNA replication/repair. Here, we identified a Plasmodium falciparum MYST-associated complex, PfNuA4, which contains 11 of the 13 conserved NuA4 subunits. Reciprocal pulldowns using PfEAF2, a shared component between the NuA4 and SWR1 complexes, not only confirmed the PfNuA4 complex but also identified the PfSWR1 complex, a histone remodeling complex, although their identities are low compared to the homologs in yeast or humans...
April 2, 2024: MSphere
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38564675/metagenome-diversity-illuminates-the-origins-of-pathogen-effectors
#28
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Stephanie S Lehman, Victoria I Verhoeve, Timothy P Driscoll, John F Beckmann, Joseph J Gillespie
Recent metagenome-assembled genome (MAG) analyses have profoundly impacted Rickettsiology systematics. The discovery of basal lineages (novel families Mitibacteraceae and Athabascaceae) with predicted extracellular lifestyles exposed an evolutionary timepoint for the transition to host dependency, which seemingly occurred independent of mitochondrial evolution. Notably, these basal rickettsiae carry the Rickettsiales vir homolog ( rvh ) type IV secretion system and purportedly use rvh to kill congener microbes rather than parasitize host cells as described for later-evolving rickettsial pathogens...
April 2, 2024: MBio
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38563018/higher-body-condition-with-infection-by-haemoproteus-parasites-in-bananaquits-coereba-flaveola
#29
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Nicole A Gutiérrez-Ramos, Miguel A Acevedo
Parasite transmission is a heterogenous process in host-parasite interactions. This heterogeneity is particularly apparent in vector-borne parasite transmission where the vector adds an additional level of complexity. Haemosporidian parasites, a widespread protist, cause a malaria-like disease in birds globally, but we still have much to learn about the consequences of infection to hosts' health. In the Caribbean, where malarial parasites are endemic, studying host-parasites interactions may give us important insights about energetic trade-offs involved in malarial parasites infections in birds...
2024: PeerJ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38561869/interactions-between-microsporidia-and-other-members-of-the-microbiome
#30
REVIEW
Jonathan Tersigni, Hala Tamim El Jarkass, Edward B James, Aaron W Reinke
The microbiome is the collection of microbes that are associated with a host. Microsporidia are intracellular eukaryotic parasites that can infect most types of animals. In the last decade, there has been much progress to define the relationship between microsporidia and the microbiome. In this review, we cover an increasing number of reports suggesting that microsporidia are common components of the microbiome in both invertebrates and vertebrates. These microsporidia infections can range from mutualistic to pathogenic, causing several physiological phenotypes, including death...
April 1, 2024: Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38561811/transcriptomics-aids-in-uncovering-the-metabolic-shifts-and-molecular-machinery-of-schizochytrium-limacinum-during-biotransformation-of-hydrophobic-substrates-to-docosahexaenoic-acid
#31
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Iqra Mariam, Eleni Krikigianni, Chloe Rantzos, Maurizio Bettiga, Paul Christakopoulos, Ulrika Rova, Leonidas Matsakas, Alok Patel
BACKGROUND: Biotransformation of waste oil into value-added nutraceuticals provides a sustainable strategy. Thraustochytrids are heterotrophic marine protists and promising producers of omega (ω) fatty acids. Although the metabolic routes for the assimilation of hydrophilic carbon substrates such as glucose are known for these microbes, the mechanisms employed for the conversion of hydrophobic substrates are not well established. Here, thraustochytrid Schizochytrium limacinum SR21 was investigated for its ability to convert oils (commercial oils with varying fatty acid composition and waste cooking oil) into ω-3 fatty acid; docosahexaenoic acid (DHA)...
April 1, 2024: Microbial Cell Factories
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38560466/variation-and-trade-offs-in-life-history-traits-of-the-protist-parasite-monocystis-perplexa-apicomplexa-in-its-earthworm-host-amynthas-agrestis
#32
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Erin L Keller, Jos J Schall
The life history of a parasite describes its partitioning of assimilated resources into growth, reproduction, and transmission effort, and its precise timing of developmental events. The life cycle, in contrast, charts the sequence of morphological stages from feeding to the transmission forms. Phenotypic plasticity in life history traits can reveal how parasites confront variable environments within hosts. Within the protist phylum Apicomplexa major clades include the malaria parasites, coccidians, and most diverse, the gregarines (with likely millions of species)...
2024: PeerJ
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38558208/streptococcus-pyogenes-cas9-ribonucleoprotein-delivery-for-efficient-rapid-and-marker-free-gene-editing-in-trypanosoma-and-leishmania
#33
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Corinne Asencio, Perrine Hervé, Pauline Morand, Quentin Oliveres, Chloé Alexandra Morel, Valérie Prouzet-Mauleon, Marc Biran, Sarah Monic, Mélanie Bonhivers, Derrick Roy Robinson, Marc Ouellette, Loïc Rivière, Frédéric Bringaud, Emmanuel Tetaud
Kinetoplastids are unicellular eukaryotic flagellated parasites found in a wide range of hosts within the animal and plant kingdoms. They are known to be responsible in humans for African sleeping sickness (Trypanosoma brucei), Chagas disease (Trypanosoma cruzi), and various forms of leishmaniasis (Leishmania spp.), as well as several animal diseases with important economic impact (African trypanosomes, including Trypanosoma congolense). Understanding the biology of these parasites necessarily implies the ability to manipulate their genomes...
April 1, 2024: Molecular Microbiology
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38551993/a-divergent-protein-kinase-a-regulatory-subunit-essential-for-morphogenesis-of-the-human-pathogen-leishmania
#34
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Renana Fischer Weinberger, Sabine Bachmaier, Veronica Ober, George B Githure, Ramu Dandugudumula, Isabelle Q Phan, Michal Almoznino, Eleni Polatoglou, Polina Tsigankov, Roni Nitzan Koren, Peter J Myler, Michael Boshart, Dan Zilberstein
Parasitic protozoa of the genus Leishmania cycle between the phagolysosome of mammalian macrophages, where they reside as rounded intracellular amastigotes, and the midgut of female sand flies, which they colonize as elongated extracellular promastigotes. Previous studies indicated that protein kinase A (PKA) plays an important role in the initial steps of promastigote differentiation into amastigotes. Here, we describe a novel regulatory subunit of PKA (which we have named PKAR3) that is unique to Leishmania and most (but not all) other Kinetoplastidae...
March 29, 2024: PLoS Pathogens
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38551366/decoding-the-arsenal-protist-effectors-and-their-impact-on-photosynthetic-hosts
#35
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Soham Mukhopadhyay, Andrea Garvetto, Sigrid Neuhauser, Edel Pérez-López
Interactions between various microbial pathogens including viruses, bacteria, fungi, oomycetes and their plant hosts have traditionally been the focus of phytopathology. In recent years, a significant and growing interest in the study of eukaryotic microorganisms not classified among fungi or oomycetes has emerged. Many of these protists establish complex interactions with photosynthetic hosts, and understanding these interactions is crucial in understanding the dynamics of these parasites within traditional and emerging types of farming, including marine aquaculture...
March 29, 2024: Molecular Plant-microbe Interactions: MPMI
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38547992/warming-increases-the-compositional-and-functional-variability-of-a-temperate-protist-community
#36
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Antonia Ahme, Anika Happe, Maren Striebel, Marco J Cabrerizo, Markus Olsson, Jakob Giesler, Ruben Schulte-Hillen, Alexander Sentimenti, Nancy Kühne, Uwe John
Phototrophic protists are a fundamental component of the world's oceans by serving as the primary source of energy, oxygen, and organic nutrients for the entire ecosystem. Due to the high natural seasonality of their habitat, temperate protists could harbour many well-adapted species that tolerate ocean warming. However, these species may not sustain ecosystem functions equally well. To address these uncertainties, we conducted a 30-day mesocosm experiment to investigate how moderate (12 °C) and substantial (18 °C) warming compared to ambient conditions (6 °C) affect the composition (18S rRNA metabarcoding) and ecosystem functions (biomass, gross oxygen productivity, nutritional quality - C:N and C:P ratio) of a North Sea spring bloom community...
March 26, 2024: Science of the Total Environment
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38546146/importance-of-integrating-mixoplankton-into-marine-ecosystem-policy-and-management-examples-from-the-marine-strategy-framework-directive
#37
REVIEW
Anna-Adriana Anschütz, Maira Maselli, Claudia Traboni, Arjen R Boon, Willem Stolte
Marine plankton capable of photosynthesis and predation ("mixoplankton") comprise up to 50% of protist plankton and include many harmful species. However, marine environmental management policies, including the European Union Marine Strategy Framework Directive (MSFD) and the USEPA, assume a strict dichotomy between autotrophic phytoplankton and heterotrophic zooplankton. Mixoplankton often differ significantly from these two categories in their response to environmental pressures and affect the marine environment in ways we are only beginning to understand...
March 28, 2024: Integrated Environmental Assessment and Management
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38543512/-blastocystis-a-mysterious-member-of-the-gut-microbiome
#38
REVIEW
Mehmet Aykur, Erdoğan Malatyalı, Filiz Demirel, Burçak Cömert-Koçak, Eleni Gentekaki, Anastasios D Tsaousis, Funda Dogruman-Al
Blastocystis is the most common gastrointestinal protist found in humans and animals. Although the clinical significance of Blastocystis remains unclear, the organism is increasingly being viewed as a commensal member of the gut microbiome. However, its impact on the microbiome is still being debated. It is unclear whether Blastocystis promotes a healthy gut and microbiome directly or whether it is more likely to colonize and persist in a healthy gut environment. In healthy people, Blastocystis is frequently associated with increased bacterial diversity and significant differences in the gut microbiome...
February 24, 2024: Microorganisms
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38540677/copines-a-family-of-calcium-sensor-proteins-and-their-role-in-brain-function
#39
REVIEW
Mikhail Khvotchev, Mikhail Soloviev
The Copines are a family of evolutionary conserved calcium-binding proteins found in most eukaryotic organisms from protists to humans. They share a unique architecture and contain tandem C2 domains and a Von Willebrand factor type A (VWA) domain. C2 domains in Copines bind calcium, phospholipids, and other proteins and mediate the transient association of these proteins with biological membranes at elevated calcium levels. The VWA domain also binds calcium and is involved in protein-protein interactions. Here, we provide a comprehensive review of the sequences, structures, expression, targeting, and function of the entire family of known Copine proteins (Copine 1-9 in mammals) with a particular emphasis on their functional roles in the mammalian brain...
February 21, 2024: Biomolecules
https://read.qxmd.com/read/38539951/epidemiology-and-molecular-characterization-of-zoonotic-gastrointestinal-protozoal-infection-in-zoo-animals-in-china
#40
JOURNAL ARTICLE
Diya An, Tingting Jiang, Changsheng Zhang, Lei Ma, Ting Jia, Yanqun Pei, Zifu Zhu, Qun Liu, Jing Liu
Zoo animals, harboring zoonotic gastrointestinal protozoal diseases, pose potential hazards to the safety of visitors and animal keepers. This study involved the collection and examination of 400 fresh fecal samples from 68 animal species, obtained from five zoos. The aim of this study was to determine the occurrence, genetic characteristics, and zoonotic potential of common gastrointestinal protists. PCR or nested PCR analysis was conducted on these samples to detect four specific parasites: Cryptosporidium spp...
March 10, 2024: Animals: An Open Access Journal From MDPI
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