Abstract
AbstractX-cells were first described as an unknown cell type in northern hemisphere flatfish in 1969. Almost a decade later they were described in an Antarctic fish, the bald notothen Trematomus borchgrevinki, thus demonstrating their global distribution. Since this time, X-cells from various northern hemisphere fish species and from three other Antarctic fishes, the emerald notothen Trematomus bernacchii, the crowned notothen Trematomus scotti, and the painted notothen Nototheniops larseni have been identified as perkinsozoan parasites of the Family Xcellidae. Currently there are seven X-cell species described within this family. Here we report the morphology of X-cells isolated from the gill filaments of the bald notothen and include details of some of its division forms. Using short-read high-throughput DNA sequencing technology we have sequenced, assembled, and verified a 5347-bp region of the X-cell rRNA repeat unit that includes the complete 18S gene. In all cases, phylogenetic analyses identified this sequence as a distinct taxon and placed it among the perkinsozoan alveolates alongside other previously identified species in the X-cell family. Using a combination of morphological and genetic evidence we now describe a new X-cell genus and species, Cryoxcellia borchgrevinki gen. nov., sp. nov., from McMurdo Sound, Antarctica.
Funder
University of Auckland research funds
Allan Wilson Centre for Molecular Ecology and Evolution
Marsden Fund
Rutherford Discovery Fellowship
Human Frontier Science Program
University of Auckland
Publisher
Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Subject
General Agricultural and Biological Sciences
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