<b>Maullinia braseltonii</b> sp. nov. (Rhizaria, Phytomyxea, Phagomyxida): A Cyst-forming Parasite of the Bull Kelp Durvillaea spp. (Stramenopila, Phaeophyceae, Fucales)

Publication Type:Journal Article
Year of Publication:2017
Authors:P. Murúa, Goecke, F., Westermeier, R., van West, P., Küpper, F. C., Neuhauser, S.
Journal:ProtistProtistProtist
Volume:168
Pagination:468-480
ISBN Number:1618-0941<br/>1434-4610
Accession Number:28822911
Keywords:brown algae, Chile, Falkland Islands, galls, Kelp/*parasitology, Phylogeny, plasmodiophorids, rDNA, resting spores., Rhizaria/*classification/genetics/*physiology, RNA, Algal/*genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 18S/genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 28S/genetics, RNA, Ribosomal, 5.8S/genetics, Sequence Analysis, RNA
Abstract:

Phytomyxea are obligate endoparasites of angiosperm plants and Stramenopiles characterised by a complex life cycle. Here Maullinia braseltonii sp. nov., an obligate parasite infecting the bull kelp Durvillaea (Phaeophyceae, Fucales) from the South-Eastern Pacific (Central Chile and Chiloe Island) and South-Western Atlantic (Falkland Islands, UK) is described. M. braseltonii causes distinct hypertrophies (galls) on the host thalli making it easily identifiable in the field. Sequence comparisons based on the partial 18S and the partial 18S-5.8S-28S regions confirmed its placement within the order Phagomyxida (Phytomyxea, Rhizaria), as a sister species of the marine parasite Maullinia ectocarpii, which is also a parasite of brown algae. The development of resting spores in M. braseltonii is described by light and electron microscopy and confirmed by FISH experiments, which visually showed the differential expression of the 28S non-coding gene, strongly in early plasmodia and weakly in late cysts. M. braseltonii is, so far, the only phytomyxean parasite of brown algae for which the formation of resting spores has been reported, and which is widely distributed in Durvillaea stocks from the Southeastern Pacific and Southwestern Atlantic.

Alternate Journal:Protist
Scratchpads developed and conceived by (alphabetical): Ed Baker, Katherine Bouton Alice Heaton Dimitris Koureas, Laurence Livermore, Dave Roberts, Simon Rycroft, Ben Scott, Vince Smith