Ancoracysta
Genus of eukaryotic microbes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Ancoracysta is a genus of eukaryotic microbes containing the species Ancoracysta twista, a predatory protist.[1]
| Ancoracysta | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Clade: | Disparia |
| Clade: | Provora |
| Phylum: | Nebulidia |
| Class: | Alveidea |
| Order: | Alveida |
| Family: | Ancoracystidae |
| Genus: | Ancoracysta Janouškovec, Tikhonenkov, Burki, Howe, Rohwer, Mylnikov & Keeling 2017 |
| Species: | A. twista |
| Binomial name | |
| Ancoracysta twista Janouškovec, Tikhonenkov, Burki, Howe, Rohwer, Mylnikov & Keeling 2017[1] | |
Description
Ancoracysta twista was first described in November 2017 in Current Biology. It was found in a sample collected from the surface of a tropical aquarium brain coral. It actively feeds on Procryptobia sorokini, probably immobilising its prey through discharging a previously unknown type of extrusome named an ancoracyst.[1]
Genetic analysis shows that it is not closely related to any known lineage, but it may be most closely related to a grouping of haptophytes and centrohelids (Haptista). It is notable for having a gene-rich mitochondrial genome, the largest known outside the jakobids or Diphylleia rotans. Uniquely, it appears to contain both the nucleus-encoded holocytochrome c synthase system III and the mitochondrion-encoded bacterial cytochrome c maturation system I.[1]
Taxonomy
A 2018 study from Cavalier-Smith, Chao & Lewis created a new subphylum and subsequent lower taxonomic ranks for Ancoracysta twista. They also created a new combination for Colponema marisrubri (Mylnikov & Tikhonenkov, 2009), which was shown to be ultrastructurally similar and phylogenetically close to A. twista, thus renaming it A. marisrubri.[2] This species was later placed into a new genus, Nebulomonas, and is now called Nebulomonas marisrubri.[3]
A 2022 study placed A. twista in a new supergroup Provora, closely related to other supergroups of Diaphoretickes such as Haptista, but no longer within Haptista.[3]