Comparative genomics of Ascetosporea gives new insight into the evolutionary basis for animal parasitism in Rhizaria

BMC Biology(2024)

Cited 0|Views4
No score
Abstract
Ascetosporea (Endomyxa, Rhizaria) is a group of unicellular parasites infecting aquatic invertebrates. They are increasingly being recognized as widespread and important in marine environments, causing large annual losses in invertebrate aquaculture. Despite their importance, little molecular data of Ascetosporea exist, with only two genome assemblies published to date. Accordingly, the evolutionary origin of these parasites is unclear, including their phylogenetic position and the genomic adaptations that accompanied the transition from a free-living lifestyle to parasitism. Here, we sequenced and assembled three new ascetosporean genomes, as well as the genome of a closely related amphizoic species, to investigate the phylogeny, origin, and genomic adaptations to parasitism in Ascetosporea. Using a phylogenomic approach, we confirm the monophyly of Ascetosporea and show that Paramyxida group with Mikrocytida, with Haplosporida being sister to both groups. We report that the genomes of these parasites are relatively small (12–36 Mb) and gene-sparse ( 2300–5200 genes), while containing surprisingly high amounts of non-coding sequence ( 70–90
More
Translated text
Key words
Genome reduction,Reductive evolution,Evolutionary transition,Phylogeny,Protozoa,Intracellular parasite,Bonamia,Marteilia,Paramarteilia,Mikrocytos,Paramikrocytos
AI Read Science
Must-Reading Tree
Example
Generate MRT to find the research sequence of this paper
Chat Paper
Summary is being generated by the instructions you defined