Pirsoniales
Group of parasitoid microbes
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pirsoniales (in the botanical code, Pirsoniida in the zoological code) is an order of marine fungus-like protists that parasitize diatoms consisting of six genera and a single family Pirsoniaceae.
| Pirsoniales | |
|---|---|
| Scientific classification | |
| Domain: | Eukaryota |
| Clade: | Sar |
| Clade: | Stramenopiles |
| Phylum: | Bigyromonadea |
| Class: | Pirsonea Cavalier-Smith, 2018 |
| Order: | Pirsoniales Cavalier-Smith & Chao, 2006 emend. Prokina et al., 2024[1] |
| Type genus | |
| Pirsonia Schnepf et al., 1990 | |
| Genera | |
| |
| Synonyms | |
| |
Description
Members of Pirsoniales are microbial parasitoids of diatoms, composed of cells with two flagella. They differentiate into an intracellular feeding portion, known as trophosome, and an external generative part, known as auxosome.[2]
Taxonomy
The first Pirsoniales genus, Pirsonia, was discovered and described in 1990 from parasitic flagellates infecting marine diatoms. Its taxonomic position was left undertermined, as its structure and the differentiation into trophosome and auxosome was unique. After the description of its type species,[3] another six species were added, and electron microscopy observations showed the flagellates have stramenopile flagella with tripartite hair-like mastigonemes. However, because of certain differences with the typical stramenopile organization of the flagellar root, the authors waited for genetic analysis to firmly determine their affinity to stramenopiles.[4][5]
The first molecular phylogenetic analysis including species of Pirsonia was published in 2004. With the exception of P. mucosa (now Pseudopirsonia, a cercozoan), the genus was firmly placed among stramenopiles, near the hyphochytrids despite the lack of morphological similarity.[6] In 2006, with a second analysis confirming the same findings, protistologist Thomas Cavalier-Smith revised the classification of stramenopiles and described the family Pirsoniaceae and order Pirsoniales (under the botanical code, or Pirsoniida under the zoological code), with Pirsonia as their type and only genus. He initially assigned the Pirsoniales to the Pseudofungi, a taxon containing hyphochytrids and oomycetes.[2] Later, with multigene analyses, he separated it into the Bigyromonada, a closely related taxon that also includes the predatory Developea, and described the class Pirsonea to accommodate Pirsoniales.[7][8]
In 2022, several new species of bigyromonads were cultured and given provisional names. Among them, one species of Pirsonia, P. chemainus, and two species representing new genera, Feodosia pseudopoda, Koktebelia satura, were resolved as part of the Pirsoniales through phylogenomic analyses.[9] The cultures of these three species died before being formally described through more detailed observations, which prompted their re-isolation and formal description in 2024, as well as the description of additional new Pirsoniales species belonging to new genera: Bordeauxia parva, Bullionia fluviatilis, and Noirmoutieria diatomophaga, which belongs to Pirsoniaceae alongside Pirsonia.[1]