Publications by authors named "Daria Tashyreva"

The knowledge of cell biology of a eukaryotic group is essential for correct interpretation of ecological and molecular data. Although diplonemid protists are one of the most species-rich lineages of marine eukaryotes, only very fragmentary information is available about the cellular architecture of this taxonomically diverse group. Here, a large serial block-face scanning electron microscopy data set complemented with light and fluorescence microscopy allowed the first detailed three-dimensional reconstruction of a diplonemid species.

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The stability of endosymbiotic associations between eukaryotes and bacteria depends on a reliable mechanism ensuring vertical inheritance of the latter. Here, we demonstrate that a host-encoded protein, located at the interface between the endoplasmic reticulum of the trypanosomatid Novymonas esmeraldas and its endosymbiotic bacterium Ca. Pandoraea novymonadis, regulates such a process.

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Symbiosis between prokaryotes and microbial eukaryotes (protists) has broadly impacted both evolution and ecology. Endosymbiosis led to mitochondria and plastids, the latter spreading across the tree of eukaryotes by subsequent rounds of endosymbiosis. Present-day endosymbionts in protists remain both common and diverse, although what function they serve is often unknown.

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Barium and strontium are often used as proxies of marine productivity in palaeoceanographic reconstructions of global climate. However, long-searched biological drivers for such correlations remain unknown. Here, we report that taxa within one of the most abundant groups of marine planktonic protists, diplonemids (Euglenozoa), are potent accumulators of intracellular barite (BaSO), celestite (SrSO), and strontiobarite (Ba,Sr)SO.

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Article Synopsis
  • * Recent studies identified GTA gene clusters in reduced genomes of bacterial endosymbionts, revealing the presence of GTA components in certain obligate symbionts, although the precise levels of expression remain undetermined due to methodological biases.
  • * Analysis indicates that while GTAs may be under purifying selection, their specific ecological functions within symbiotic relationships are still unclear, hinting at possible roles in interactions with their eukaryotic hosts given their conservation across diverse species.
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  • Diplonemids are flagellate protists found in marine and freshwater environments, previously considered rare but now recognized for their diversity and abundance in oceans.
  • Recent advances in isolating and cultivating these organisms have led to the discovery of new genera, prompting a reassessment of their ecological roles and relationships, including predation and parasitism.
  • This review covers recent findings on their diversity, genomics, and metabolism, with a focus on the genus Diplonema, highlighting the complexity of their genomes and their potential as model organisms in marine protist research.
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Most of the genetic, cellular, and biochemical diversity of life rests within single-celled organisms - the prokaryotes (bacteria and archaea) and microbial eukaryotes (protists). Very close interactions, or symbioses, between protists and prokaryotes are ubiquitous, ecologically significant, and date back at least two billion years ago to the origin of mitochondria. However, most of our knowledge about the evolution and functions of eukaryotic symbioses comes from the study of animal hosts, which represent only a small subset of eukaryotic diversity.

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Euglenozoa is a species-rich group of protists, which have extremely diverse lifestyles and a range of features that distinguish them from other eukaryotes. They are composed of free-living and parasitic kinetoplastids, mostly free-living diplonemids, heterotrophic and photosynthetic euglenids, as well as deep-sea symbiontids. Although they form a well-supported monophyletic group, these morphologically rather distinct groups are almost never treated together in a comparative manner, as attempted here.

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Background: The family Trypanosomatidae encompasses parasitic flagellates, some of which cause serious vector-transmitted diseases of humans and domestic animals. However, insect-restricted parasites represent the ancestral and most diverse group within the family. They display a range of unusual features and their study can provide insights into the biology of human pathogens.

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Article Synopsis
  • - Genome evolution in bacterial endosymbionts is highly affected by genetic drift and selective pressures, leading to reduced genomes and adaptations to host organisms, especially noted in animal endosymbionts.
  • - This study focuses on four bacterial endosymbionts from three species of diplonemids (a type of protist), revealing that their genomes are significantly small and show convergent traits like similar gene content and reduced metabolic capabilities.
  • - The findings suggest that these endosymbionts have developed unique features, such as modified secretion systems for host interactions and alterations in their cellular functions, indicating a shared evolutionary path among diverse eukaryotic hosts throughout the tree of life.
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  • Researchers identified two new species of hemistasiids from Tokyo Bay, Japan, expanding the previously known single species, Hemistasia phaeocysticola.
  • These new species exhibit unique cellular structures and impressive motility, featuring characteristics such as a digestive vacuole and distinct morphologies in culture.
  • The study introduces two new genera, Artemidia and Namystynia, to classify the new species, Artemidia motanka and Namystynia karyoxenos, which also hosts a rickettsiid endosymbiont.
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Diplonemids were recently found to be the most species-rich group of marine planktonic protists. Based on phylogenetic analysis of 18S rRNA gene sequences and morphological observations, we report the description of new members of the genus Rhynchopus - R. humris sp.

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Diplonemids represent a hyperdiverse and abundant yet poorly studied group of marine protists. Here we describe two new members of the genus (Diplonemea, Euglenozoa), sp. nov.

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We have sequenced, annotated, and analyzed the genome of . Pandoraea novymonadis, a recently described bacterial endosymbiont of the trypanosomatid When compared with genomes of its free-living relatives, it has all the hallmarks of the endosymbionts' genomes, such as significantly reduced size, extensive gene loss, low GC content, numerous gene rearrangements, and low codon usage bias. In addition, .

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Cyanobacteria form extensive macroscopic mats in shallow freshwater environments in the High Arctic and Antarctic. In these habitats, the communities are exposed to seasonal freezing and desiccation as well as to freeze-thawing and drying-rewetting cycles. Here, we characterized the annual cycles of two Phormidium communities in very shallow seepages located in central Svalbard.

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Although desiccation tolerance of Microcoleus species is a well-known phenomenon, there is very little information about their limits of desiccation tolerance in terms of cellular water content, the survival rate of their cells, and the environmental factors inducing their resistance to drying. We have discovered that three Microcoleus strains, isolated from terrestrial habitats of the High Arctic, survived extensive dehydration (to 0.23 g water g(-1) dry mass), but did not tolerate complete desiccation (to 0.

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Bacterial populations display high heterogeneity in viability and physiological activity at the single-cell level, especially under stressful conditions. We demonstrate a novel staining protocol for multiparameter assessment of individual cells in physiologically heterogeneous populations of cyanobacteria. The protocol employs fluorescent probes, i.

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