Microsporidia and invertebrate hosts: genome-informed taxonomy surrounding a new lineage of crayfish-infecting Nosema spp. (Nosematida)
The Microsporidia, an often overlooked fungal lineage, exhibit increasing diversity and taxonomic understanding with the use of genomic techniques. They are obligate parasites infecting a diversity of hosts, including crustaceans. Crustacea are, in essence, ancient insects and their relationship wit...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Fungal diversity 2024-11, Vol.128 (1), p.167-190 |
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Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | The Microsporidia, an often overlooked fungal lineage, exhibit increasing diversity and taxonomic understanding with the use of genomic techniques. They are obligate parasites infecting a diversity of hosts, including crustaceans. Crustacea are, in essence, ancient insects and their relationship with the Microsporidia is both diverse and convoluted. Relationships between crayfish and their microsporidian parasites display geospatial and taxonomic diversity. Through classical (histological, ultrastructural, developmental) and genomic (phylogenetic, phylogenomic) approaches, we expand the known diversity of crayfish-infecting microsporidia into the genus
Nosema
by describing three novel species from North America:
Nosema astafloridana
n. sp. infecting
Procambarus pictus
and
Procambarus spiculifer
,
Nosema rusticus
n. sp. infecting
Faxonius rusticus
, and
Nosema wisconsinii
n. sp. infecting
Faxonius propinquus
and
Faxonius virilis
. Additionally, we provide SSU sequence data for further
Nosema
diversity from
Procambarus clarkii
and
Pacifasticus gambelii
. The taxonomy of aquatic crustacean-infecting
Nosema
have been under scrutiny among microsporidiologists—using genomic data we solidify this systematic relationship. Our genomic data reveal phylogenomic divergence between terrestrial insect-infecting
Nosema
and aquatic crustacean-infecting
Nosema
but place our novel species within the
Nosema
. Comparative genomic analysis reveal that
Nosema rusticus
n. sp. is a tetraploid organism, making this the first known polyploid from the genus
Nosema
. Annotation of the genomic data highlight that crayfish-infecting
Nosema
have distinct proteomic differences when compared to amphipod and insect-infecting microsporidians. Alongside the new diversity uncovered and genome-supported systematics, we consider the role of these new ‘invasive’ parasites in biological invasion systems, exploring their relationship with their invasive hosts. |
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ISSN: | 1560-2745 1878-9129 1878-9129 |
DOI: | 10.1007/s13225-024-00543-w |