AI Article Synopsis

  • The genus Hypotrichomonas, part of the Hypotrichomonadea class, includes five species previously described from lizards and birds, with only H. acosta documented repeatedly.
  • Researchers isolated 23 strains representing eight distinct species, including six that are new to science, revealing a previously overlooked morphological and phylogenetic diversity.
  • The diversity of Hypotrichomonas spans a wide variety of hosts (like cockroaches to primates), highlighting that our understanding of parabasalids remains limited, indicating that many more species likely exist.

Article Abstract

The genus HypotrichomonasLee, 1960 belongs to the small parabasalian class Hypotrichomonadea. Although five Hypotrichomonas species have been described from intestines of lizards and birds, some descriptions were brief and incomplete. Only the type species H. acosta has been observed repeatedly. We have established 23 strains of the genus Hypotrichomonas in culture. Phylogenetic and morphological analyses showed that these isolates represent eight distinct species, six of which are novel. Three of the species showed unusual morphology, such as a reduced undulating membrane, absence of the free part of the recurrent flagellum or a costa-like fiber. Our strains were isolated from a wide range of hosts including cockroaches, frogs, tortoises, lizards, snakes, marsupials, pigs, rodents, and primates. The genus Hypotrichomonas thus contains a relatively large number of species that differ in morphology, phylogenetic position and host range. It is remarkable that such diversity of hypotrichomonads was previously undetected, although a number of studies dealt with intestinal trichomonads of vertebrates and invertebrates. Our results indicate that the diversity of the genus Hypotrichomonas as well as of the whole Parabasalia is still only poorly understood, and the lineages described so far likely represent only a small fraction of the true diversity of parabasalids.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.ejop.2015.02.003DOI Listing

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Article Synopsis
  • The genus Hypotrichomonas, part of the Hypotrichomonadea class, includes five species previously described from lizards and birds, with only H. acosta documented repeatedly.
  • Researchers isolated 23 strains representing eight distinct species, including six that are new to science, revealing a previously overlooked morphological and phylogenetic diversity.
  • The diversity of Hypotrichomonas spans a wide variety of hosts (like cockroaches to primates), highlighting that our understanding of parabasalids remains limited, indicating that many more species likely exist.
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We propose a new classification of Parabasalia which is congruent with both ultrastructural and molecular-phylogenetic studies. We identify six main parabasalid lineages and give them the rank of class: Hypotrichomonadea, Trichomonadea, Tritrichomonadea, Cristamonadea, Trichonymphea, and Spirotrichonymphea. Trichomonadea is characterized by a single mastigont and by the absence of both a comb-like structure and an infrakinetosomal body.

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We determined small subunit ribosomal DNA sequences from three parabasalid species, Trichomitus batrachorum strain R105, Tetratrichomonas gallinarum, and Pentatrichomonas hominis belonging to the Trichomonadinae subfamily. Unrooted molecular phylogenetic trees inferred by distance, parsimony, and likelihood methods reveal four discrete clades among the parabasalids. The Trichomonadinae form a robust monophyletic group.

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Small subunit ribosomal DNA sequences were obtained by polymerase chain reaction from four trichomonad species: a frog endosymbiont Trichomitus batrachorum, an intestinal endosymbiont of a squamate reptile, Hypotrichomonas acosta and two free-living isolates, Monotrichomonas carabina and Monotrichomonas sp. Molecular trees inferred by distance, parsimony and likelihood techniques identify three well-resolved clusters within the trichomonads, however bootstrap values do not strongly support a particular branching order for these lineages. The first cluster includes the Devescovinidae and the Calonymphidae.

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