Molecular phylogeny of Spirotrichonymphea (Parabasalia) with emphasis on Spironympha, Spirotrichonympha, and three new genera Pseudospironympha, Nanospironympha, and Brugerollina

Author:

Noda Satoko12ORCID,Kitade Osamu1,Jasso‐Selles Daniel E.3,Taerum Stephen J.3,Takayanagi Miki2,Radek Renate4,Lo Nathan5ORCID,Ohkuma Moriya6,Gile Gillian H.3ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Graduate School of Science and Engineering Ibaraki University Mito Japan

2. Graduate School of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Yamanashi Yamanashi Japan

3. School of Life Sciences Arizona State University Tempe Arizona USA

4. Institute of Biology Freie Universität Berlin Berlin Germany

5. School of Life and Environmental Sciences University of Sydney Sydney New South Wales Australia

6. Japan Collection of Microorganisms RIKEN BioResource Research Center Ibaraki Japan

Abstract

AbstractSpirotrichonymphea, one of the six classes of phylum Parabasalia, are characterized by bearing many flagella in spiral rows, and they occur exclusively in the guts of termites. Phylogenetic relationships among the 13 described genera are not well understood due to complex morphological evolution and a paucity of molecular data. One such understudied genus is Spironympha. It has been variously considered a valid genus, a subgenus of Spirotrichonympha, or an “immature” life cycle stage of Spirotrichonympha. To clarify this, we sequenced the small subunit rRNA gene sequences of Spironympha and Spirotrichonympha cells isolated from the hindguts of Reticulitermes species and Hodotermopsis sjostedti and confirmed the molecular identity of H. sjostedti symbionts using fluorescence in situ hybridization. Spironympha as currently circumscribed is polyphyletic, with both H. sjostedti symbiont species branching separately from the “true” Spironympha from Reticulitermes. Similarly, the Spirotrichonympha symbiont of H. sjostedti branches separately from the “true” Spirotrichonympha found in Reticulitermes. Our data support Spironympha from Reticulitermes as a valid genus most closely related to Spirotrichonympha, though its monophyly and interspecific relationships are not resolved in our molecular phylogenetic analysis. We propose three new genera to accommodate the H. sjostedti symbionts and two new species of Spirotrichonympha from Reticulitermes.

Funder

Japan Society for the Promotion of Science

National Science Foundation

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Microbiology

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