Transcript ppt
Protozoa I
Protozoans
Over 50,000 known species
45 phyla (more than
metazoa!)
Relationship to Other Organisms
Two Kingdoms – Arististotle, Linnaeus
Plants
Metaphyta
Protophyta
Animals
Metazoa
Protozoa
Lots of problems with this scheme
Relationship to Other Organisms
3 kingdoms of Haeckle/Darwin
Plants
Animals
Protists
Took care of the little stuff seen with the early
microscopes
Still has problems
Relationship to Other Organisms
Copeland’s Four-Kingdom System (1938)
Kingdom
Monera.
Kingdom Protoctista or Protista (priority?).
Protozoa
Red and brown algae
Fungi
Kingdom
Plantae
Green algae
Fungi
Kingdom
Animalia
Relationship to Other Organisms
Whittaker – 1960’s
Added
Kingdom Fungi
5 Kingdoms
Kingdom
Kingdom
Kingdom
Kingdom
Kingdom
Animalia
Plantae
Eukaryotes
Fungi
Protista
Monera - Prokaryotes
Kingdoms and Domains
Carl Woese - U. of
Illinois (1970’spresent)
Studied gene
sequences of
bacteria, archaea,
and eukaryotes
Found
major
fundamental
differences
Relationship to Other Organisms
Carl Woese – late 1970’s
Archaea
NOT Archaebacteria
Biochemistry is different from bacteria
More closely related to animals than they are to
bacteria
Briefly had six kingdoms with Archaea and Eubacteria
replacing the Monera
Changed to three domains
Eubacteria
Prokaryotes
Archaea
Eukarya
6 Kingdoms of Life
3 Domains of Life
Relationship to Other Organisms
Protista or Protoctista
Some
algae (red, most green algae are not included)
Protozoa
Traditionally classified based on how they move:
amoebae, flagellates, ciliates, sporozoans
Has changed recently to also contain:
Some slime molds
Aquatic “molds”
“Protists” are now distributed among all kingdoms.”
pg 37 incorrect. No prokaryotic protists!
Old system classified by
locomotion
Ciliophora (=Ciliata, ciliates) a clade
Hypotrichs, holotrichs, heterotrichs, suctorians
Apicomplexa- (=Sporozoa) a likely clade
Gregarina, Coccidia – includes many important parasites
Mastigophora (=flagellates) a functional group
Excavates, Kinetoplastids, Parabasalids,
Choanoflagellates, Dinoflagellates (some are important
parasites)
Sarcodina (=amoebas) a functional group Amoebozoa,
Foraminifera, Actinopoda (Radiolaria, Heliozoa)
(many are important geologically)
Protozoan Phylogeny
Problem
Protozoa
is a polyphyletic group
Multiple
ancestors rather than a single
ancestral protozoan
Aim
is to establish monophyletic groups that
have a single ancestor
Protozoan Phylogeny
Reclassification based on
Life
History
Ultrastructure
Biochemistry
Molecular data including DNA sequencing
Most trees are being constructed based on
molecular data
May or may not be the “best” way to go
Dissenting camps: role of lateral gene transfer,
choice of genes for sequencing, convergent
evolution, etc.
Relationship to Other Organisms
Protista – still used as teaching tool.
Grades
7-12?
Undergrad intro bio (with reservations)
We will not discuss Protists!
Instead,
note the following schemes:
First - breakdown of what used to be protists.
Second - taxonomic relationships of organisms
covered in P. Ch 3 (pg 38).
Only
cover those in text and/or lab
Eukaryote classification is in flux
The major clades are not yet sorted
out – but there is rapid progress
Based on cell structural features,
there are about 60 different named
eukaryote taxa according to Patterson
(Tree of Life)
These have been sorted into 8 clades
based on molecular & structural data
by Baldauf 2003 (Science 300:1703)
8 major eukaryote clades
(mainly from Baldouf 2003)
1.
2.
3.
4.
Opisthokonts includes animals, fungi
Single basal flagellum on reproductive cells, flat
mitochondrial cristae (most eukaryotes have tubular
ones).
Plants includes land plants, green algae, red algae
Plastids with just two outer membranes (primary
plastids).
Heterokonts includes brown algae, golden algae,
diatoms, water molds
Unique flagellum decorated with hollow tripartite
hairs (stramenopiles) and, usually, a second plain
one. Plastids have 4 membranes (secondary).
Cercozoa includes foraminifera (& radiolaria?)
Amoebae with filose pseudopodia, often living
within tests.
5.
6.
7.
8.
Amoebozoa includes lobose amoebae, most slime
molds
Mostly naked amoebae (lacking tests), often with
lobose pseudopodia.
Alveolates includes ciliates, dinoflagellates,
apicomplexans
Have systems of cortical alveoli directly beneath
their plasma membranes
Discicristates includes many flagellates, some slime
molds
Have discoid mitochondrial cristae
Amitochondrial excavates includes parabasalids,
diplomonads
Most have an excavated ventral feeding groove, and
all lack mitochondria.
Defining Characteristics of
“Protozoa”
1674 Antonie van Leeuwenhoeke
Nearly ubiquitous –wherever there is water
Soil
Water
On/in
plants and animals
Life styles
Free-living
Symbioses
Mutualists
Parasites
Antonie van Leeuwenhoeke
Things that animals do (and
protozoa too)
Move (at some stage in the life cycle)
Obtain food and digest it
Obtain oxygen
Maintain water and salt balance
Remove metabolic wastes
Reproduce
Sense and react to the environment
Defining Characteristics of
“Protozoa”
General characteristics highly variable
Size,
morphology, ultrastructure
Nutritional mode, physiology
Behavior, life history
Importance
Disease
agents
Model organisms in biological research
Most are probably unknown
82,000
known species
½ of these are fossils (shelled forms)
Defining Characteristics
of “Protozoa”
Importance
Disease
agents
Model organisms
Ecology
Genetics
Physiology
Development
Defining Characteristics of
“Protozoa”
Eukaryotic
Unicellular
Mostly
small 5-250 μm (0.5 μm – 7 mm)
Multicellularity in a few but this is a derived
character
No collagen or chitin in cell walls
Heterotrophic
Ancestral
state is non-photosynthetic
Photosynthesis in a few groups is a derived character
Most are motile (except Apicomplexa)
Protist Bauplan - On Being
Unicellular
Strategies and constraints of a
Unicellular Bauplan
Size
limitations
Body
structure
Excretion
Gas
exchange
Support
and locomotion
Nutrition
Reproduction
Activity
and sensitivity
On Being Unicellular
Protozoa vs metazoa
Protozoa are unicellular
Thought
BUT
to be simplest form of life
…
Protozoa are not simple!
A
protozoan is more complex than any single
metazoan cell
Very complex internal structure
Specialized organelles take the place of organs in
metazoans
Halteria
Stylonychia
Size limitations
Surface area to volume ratio
SA
V
increases as radius squared
increases as radius cubed
As
cell becomes larger, diffusion
becomes more and more difficult
(~1 mm limit)
Need
to have lots of complex
projections etc. to increase SA
Body Structure
Cytoplasm has two regions
Ectoplasm
Next to cell membrane
Clear, stiff, gelatinous
Endoplasm
Inner portion
More fluid in nature
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=85D
GyFzxvy8&feature=player_detailpage
Body Structure
Only one plasma membrane
Everything
is inside that membrane
Structure is identical to the plasma
membrane of all other multicellular
organisms
High SA/V for protist cells
Membrane has fluid mosaic structure
Lipids
and proteins can move about laterally
within the membrane
Membrane has fluid mosaic
structure
Body Structure
Internal structures
Cytoskeleton
Shape
Rigidity
Cytoskeleton
Myonemes
Cytopharynx
Cytopharynx
Macronucleus
250 µm
Cirri
Body Structure
Outer coverings - give
shape/support/protection
Pellicle
Interlocking strips of
protein below plasma
membrane in Euglenids
Gives cell shape and
stability while permitting
flexibility
Eugloid movement = metaboly
Body Structure
Lorica
Vase-shaped
protective shell
Body Structure
Test
External “shell”
Usually many parts
Plates are below
plasma membrane
(cellulose plates in
dinoflagellates,
various materials in
testate amoebas)
CaCO3 foraminiferans
Silica in radiolarians
Body Structure
The usual eukaryotic organelles
May be more than one macronucleus
Runs everyday activities of cell
May be one or more micronuclei
Used for sexual reproduction
Some
are anaerobes
Most have no mitochondria or cytochromes, and have
an incomplete TCA cycle (tricarboxylic acid cycle)
Some contain hydrogenosomes-small membranedelimited organelles containing a unique electron
transfer system that uses protons as terminal electron
acceptors to form molecular hydrogen
Trichonympha lives in the gut of termites
Giardia is an intestinal parasite
Mitochondria clockwise
Paramecium
Cryptomonad
Euglena
Body Structure
Some protozoa are anaerobes.
Trichonympha lives in the gut of termites
Giardia is an intestinal parasite
Most have no mitochondria or cytochromes, and have an
incomplete TCA cycle (tricarboxylic acid cycle).
Some contain hydrogenosomes-small membranedelimited organelles containing a unique electron
transfer system that uses protons as terminal electron
acceptors to form molecular hydrogen.
Some have symbiotic aerobic bacteria that do the job of
TCA cycle for the host.
Body Structure
Defense against predation
Change
shape to become
harder to eat.
Euplotes detects presence of
predator
Chemically
Physically
Euplotes swells in middle and
becomes too big for Lembadion
to swallow
Body Structure
Special organelles
Contractile
vacuoles
Osmoregulation in freshwater species
Contractile Vacuole
Osmoregulation in FW
Contractile Vacuole
Osmotic Regulation
Body Structure
Special
organelles
Trichocysts
Defense, prey capture
Gas Exchange
No circulatory system
All
transport is by diffusion
Plasma membrane must
remain moist for gases to
diffuse
Restricts protozoa to moist
habitats