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1.
J Acoust Soc Am ; 155(1): 673-680, 2024 Jan 01.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-38270479

RESUMO

This study experimentally investigated acoustically driven gas-mixture separation. Acoustic wave propagation in a narrow tube can induce gas-mixture separation. A binary mixture of helium and argon was used as the gas mixture. The pressure amplitude of the acoustic wave and initial molar fraction of the helium gas were investigated. The obtained experimental data indicated that the molar fraction initially increased with increasing pressure amplitude, whereas the saturated molar fraction did not show a clear dependence on the pressure. Although the degree of separation was smaller with purer helium, gas-mixture separation occurred under all conditions within the experimental range.

2.
Sci Rep ; 11(1): 3217, 2021 02 05.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-33547391

RESUMO

The zoosporic obligate endoparasites, Olpidium, hold a pivotal position to the reconstruction of the flagellum loss in fungi, one of the key morphological transitions associated with the colonization of land by the early fungi. We generated genome and transcriptome data from non-axenic zoospores of Olpidium bornovanus and used a metagenome approach to extract phylogenetically informative fungal markers. Our phylogenetic reconstruction strongly supported Olpidium as the closest zoosporic relative of the non-flagellated terrestrial fungi. Super-alignment analyses resolved Olpidium as sister to the non-flagellated terrestrial fungi, whereas a super-tree approach recovered different placements of Olpidium, but without strong support. Further investigations detected little conflicting signal among the sampled markers but revealed a potential polytomy in early fungal evolution associated with the branching order among Olpidium, Zoopagomycota and Mucoromycota. The branches defining the evolutionary relationships of these lineages were characterized by short branch lengths and low phylogenetic content and received equivocal support for alternative phylogenetic hypotheses from individual markers. These nodes were marked by important morphological innovations, including the transition to hyphal growth and the loss of flagellum, which enabled early fungi to explore new niches and resulted in rapid and temporally concurrent Precambrian diversifications of the ancestors of several phyla of fungi.


Assuntos
Fungos/genética , Blastocladiomycota/genética , Quitridiomicetos/genética , Genoma Fúngico , Filogenia , Transcriptoma
3.
Genome Biol Evol ; 7(6): 1590-601, 2015 May 14.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25977457

RESUMO

As decomposers, fungi are key players in recycling plant material in global carbon cycles. We hypothesized that genomes of early diverging fungi may have inherited pectinases from an ancestral species that had been able to extract nutrients from pectin-containing land plants and their algal allies (Streptophytes). We aimed to infer, based on pectinase gene expansions and on the organismal phylogeny, the geological timing of the plant-fungus association. We analyzed 40 fungal genomes, three of which, including Gonapodya prolifera, were sequenced for this study. In the organismal phylogeny from 136 housekeeping loci, Rozella diverged first from all other fungi. Gonapodya prolifera was included among the flagellated, predominantly aquatic fungal species in Chytridiomycota. Sister to Chytridiomycota were the predominantly terrestrial fungi including zygomycota I and zygomycota II, along with the ascomycetes and basidiomycetes that comprise Dikarya. The Gonapodya genome has 27 genes representing five of the seven classes of pectin-specific enzymes known from fungi. Most of these share a common ancestry with pectinases from Dikarya. Indicating functional and sequence similarity, Gonapodya, like many Dikarya, can use pectin as a carbon source for growth in pure culture. Shared pectinases of Dikarya and Gonapodya provide evidence that even ancient aquatic fungi had adapted to extract nutrients from the plants in the green lineage. This implies that 750 million years, the estimated maximum age of origin of the pectin-containing streptophytes represents a maximum age for the divergence of Chytridiomycota from the lineage including Dikarya.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Fungos/classificação , Filogenia , Poligalacturonase/genética , Eucariotos/genética , Fungos/enzimologia , Fungos/genética , Genoma Fúngico , Plantas/microbiologia
4.
Protoplasma ; 249(1): 3-19, 2012 Jan.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-21424613

RESUMO

Molecular sequencing has helped resolve the phylogenetic relationships amongst the diverse groups of algal, fungal-like and protist organisms that constitute the Chromalveolate "superkingdom" clade. It is thought that the whole clade evolved from a photosynthetic ancestor and that there have been at least three independent plastid losses during their evolutionary history. The fungal-like oomycetes and hyphochytrids, together with the marine flagellates Pirsonia and Developayella, form part of the clade defined by Cavalier-Smith and Chao (2006) as the phylum "Pseudofungi", which is a sister to the photosynthetic chromistan algae (phylum Ochrophyta). Within the oomycetes, a number of predominantly marine holocarpic genera appear to diverge before the main "saprolegnian" and "peronosporalean" lines, into which all oomycetes had been traditionally placed. It is now clear that oomycetes have their evolutionary roots in the sea. The earliest diverging oomycete genera so far documented, Eurychasma and Haptoglossa, are both obligate parasites that show a high degree of complexity and sophistication in their host parasite interactions and infection structures. Key morphological and cytological features of the oomycetes will be reviewed in the context of our revised understanding of their likely phylogeny. Recent genomic studies have revealed a number of intriguing similarities in host-pathogen interactions between the oomycetes with their distant apicocomplexan cousins. Therefore, the earlier view that oomycetes evolved from the largely saprotrophic "saprolegnian line" is not supported and current evidence shows these organisms evolved from simple holocarpic marine parasites. Both the hyphal-like pattern of growth and the acquisition of oogamous sexual reproduction probably developed largely after the migration of these organisms from the sea to land.


Assuntos
Evolução Molecular , Oomicetos/classificação , Filogenia , Adaptação Biológica , Animais , Organismos Aquáticos/classificação , Organismos Aquáticos/citologia , Organismos Aquáticos/patogenicidade , Organismos Aquáticos/fisiologia , Flagelos/fisiologia , Interações Hospedeiro-Patógeno , Microscopia Eletrônica , Mitocôndrias/fisiologia , Nematoides/microbiologia , Oomicetos/citologia , Oomicetos/genética , Oomicetos/patogenicidade , Oomicetos/fisiologia , Especificidade da Espécie , Esporos Fúngicos/ultraestrutura
5.
BMC Evol Biol ; 11: 331, 2011 Nov 15.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22085768

RESUMO

BACKGROUND: From a common ancestor with animals, the earliest fungi inherited flagellated zoospores for dispersal in water. Terrestrial fungi lost all flagellated stages and reproduce instead with nonmotile spores. Olpidium virulentus (= Olpidium brassicae), a unicellular fungus parasitizing vascular plant root cells, seemed anomalous. Although Olpidium produces zoospores, in previous phylogenetic studies it appeared nested among the terrestrial fungi. Its position was based mainly on ribosomal gene sequences and was not strongly supported. Our goal in this study was to use amino acid sequences from four genes to reconstruct the branching order of the early-diverging fungi with particular emphasis on the position of Olpidium. RESULTS: We concatenated sequences from the Ef-2, RPB1, RPB2 and actin loci for maximum likelihood and Bayesian analyses. In the resulting trees, Olpidium virulentus, O. bornovanus and non-flagellated terrestrial fungi formed a strongly supported clade. Topology tests rejected monophyly of the Olpidium species with any other clades of flagellated fungi. Placing Olpidium at the base of terrestrial fungi was also rejected. Within the terrestrial fungi, Olpidium formed a monophyletic group with the taxa traditionally classified in the phylum Zygomycota. Within Zygomycota, Mucoromycotina was robustly monophyletic. Although without bootstrap support, Monoblepharidomycetes, a small class of zoosporic fungi, diverged from the basal node in Fungi. The zoosporic phylum Blastocladiomycota appeared as the sister group to the terrestrial fungi plus Olpidium. CONCLUSIONS: This study provides strong support for Olpidium as the closest living flagellated relative of the terrestrial fungi. Appearing nested among hyphal fungi, Olpidium's unicellular thallus may have been derived from ancestral hyphae. Early in their evolution, terrestrial hyphal fungi may have reproduced with zoospores.


Assuntos
Quitridiomicetos/genética , Evolução Molecular , Fungos/genética , Filogenia , Quitridiomicetos/citologia , DNA Fúngico/genética , DNA Fúngico/isolamento & purificação , Fungos/citologia , RNA Fúngico/genética , RNA Fúngico/isolamento & purificação
6.
Mycol Res ; 112(Pt 3): 361-74, 2008 Mar.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18308530

RESUMO

Olpidiopsis porphyrae sp. nov., a marine oomycete endoparasite that infects the commercially cultivated red alga Porphyra yezoensis, is described and its phylogenetic position based on molecular data and ultrastructural morphology is discussed. O. porphyrae infects the host Porphyra by means of encysted zoospores. Spherical-shaped holocarpic thalli develop within the cytoplasm of its algal host, which produce monoplanetic, subapically biflagellate zoospores. The characteristic features of this isolate are the ellipsoidal, unicellular thallus and simple holocarpic zoosporangial development, which show morphological similarity with the genus Olpidiopsis. Laboratory infection experiments with a wide range of green, brown, and red algae revealed that O. porphyrae infects several stages of the bangialean red algae (the genera Bangia and Porphyra). Molecular phylogenetic analyses inferred from both SSU rRNA and cox2 genes showed O. porphyrae branched before the main saprolegnian and peronosporalean lineages within the monophyletic oomycete clade, indicating its phylogenetic separation from them. A single or double K-body-like organelle, which contains tubular inclusions, is found located to one side of the zoospore nucleus and shows similarities to homologous organelles previously described in O. saprolegniae. The ultrastructural morphology of O. porphyrae with zoospore initials containing K-bodies and tubular mitochondrial cristae is characteristic of oomycetes. Group I intron-like multiple insertions were found in the SSU rRNA gene of O. porphyrae. This is the first report of SSU group I introns in the class Oomycetes.


Assuntos
Oomicetos/classificação , Oomicetos/ultraestrutura , Filogenia , Porphyra/microbiologia , Ciclo-Oxigenase 2/genética , DNA de Algas/genética , DNA Fúngico/genética , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Oomicetos/genética , Oomicetos/fisiologia , Porphyra/fisiologia , RNA Ribossômico/genética , Alinhamento de Sequência , Análise de Sequência de DNA
7.
Protist ; 159(2): 299-318, 2008 Apr.
Artigo em Inglês | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-18243049

RESUMO

The morphological development, ultrastructural cytology, and molecular phylogeny of Eurychasma dicksonii, a holocarpic oomycete endoparasite of phaeophyte algae, were investigated in laboratory cultures. Infection of the host algae by E. dicksonii is initiated by an adhesorium-like infection apparatus. First non-walled, the parasite cell developed a cell wall and numerous large vacuoles once it had almost completely filled the infected host cell (foamy stage). Large-scale cytoplasmic changes led to the differentiation of a sporangium with peripheral primary cysts. Secondary zoospores appeared to be liberated from the primary cysts in the internal space left after the peripheral spores differentiated. These zoospores contained two phases of peripheral vesicles, most likely homologous to the dorsal encystment vesicles and K-bodies observed in other oomycetes. Following zoospore liberation the walls of the empty cyst were left behind, forming the so-called net sporangium, a distinctive morphological feature of this genus. The morphological and ultrastructural features of Eurychasma were discussed in relation to similarities with other oomycetes. Both SSU rRNA and COII trees pointed to a basal position of Eurychasma among the Oomycetes. The cox2 sequences also revealed that the UGA codon encoded tryptophan, constituting the first report of stop codon reassignment in an oomycete mitochondrion.


Assuntos
Oomicetos/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Oomicetos/ultraestrutura , Phaeophyceae/parasitologia , Filogenia , Códon/genética , Ciclo-Oxigenase 2/genética , DNA de Algas/genética , DNA Ribossômico/genética , Dados de Sequência Molecular , Oomicetos/classificação , Oomicetos/fisiologia , Phaeophyceae/crescimento & desenvolvimento , Phaeophyceae/fisiologia , Phaeophyceae/ultraestrutura , RNA Ribossômico/genética
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