Microsporidia

This MedLibrary.org supplementary page on Microsporidia is provided directly from the open source Wikipedia as a service to our readers. Please see the note below on authorship of this content, as well as the Wikipedia usage guidelines. To search for other content from our encyclopedia supplement, please use the form below:

Microsporidia
Fibrillanosema crangonycis
Fibrillanosema crangonycis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Phylum: Zygomycota
Class: Microsporidia
Balbiani 1882[1]
Subclasses

Dihaplophasea
Haplophasea

Wikispecies has information related to:
Wikimedia Commons has media related to:

Microsporidia are parasites of animals, now considered to be extremely reduced fungi. Most infect insects, but they are also responsible for common diseases of crustaceans and fish, and have been found in most other animal groups, including humans and other mammals which can be parasitized by species of Encephalitozoon. Replication takes place within the host's cells, which are infected by means of unicellular spores. These vary from 1-40 μm, making them some of the smallest eukaryotes. They also have the shortest eukaryotic genomes.

Microsporidia are unusual in lacking mitochondria and in having mitosomes. They also lack motile structures such as flagella. The spores are protected by a layered wall including proteins and chitin. Their interior is dominated by a unique coiled structure called a polar tube (not to be confused with the polar filaments of Myxozoa). In most cases there are two closely associated nuclei, forming a diplokaryon, but sometimes there is only one.

During infection, the polar tube penetrates the host cell (the process has been compared by Patrick J. Keeling to "turning a garden hose inside out"), and the contents of the spore are pumped through it. Keeling likens the system to a combination of "harpoon and hypodermic syringe", adding that it is "one of the most sophisticated infection mechanisms in biology".

Once inside the host cell, the sporoplasm grows, dividing or forming a multinucleate plasmodium before producing new spores. The life cycle varies considerably. Some have a simple asexual life cycle, while others have a complex life cycle involving multiple hosts and both asexual and sexual reproduction. Different types of spores may be produced at different stages, probably with different functions including autoinfection (transmission within a single host). The Microsporidia often cause chronic, debilitating diseases rather than lethal infections. Effects on the host include reduced longevity, fertility, weight, and general vigor. Vertical transmission of microsporidia is frequently reported. In the case of insect hosts, vertical transmission often occurs as transovarial transmission, where the microsporidian parasites pass from the ovaries of the female host into eggs and eventually multiply in the infected larvae. Amblyospora salinaria n. sp. which infects the mosquito Culex salinarius Coquillett, and Amblyospora californica which infects the mosquito Culex tarsalis Coquillett, provide typical examples of transovarial transmission of microsporidia (Andreadis and Hall 1979a,b; Jahn et al. 1986; Becnel and Andreadis 1998).

Because they are unicellular, Microsporidia were traditionally treated as protozoa, and like other amitochondriate eukaryotes were considered to have diverged very early on. However, other genes place them alongside or within the Fungi, and this is supported by several chemical and morphological features. In particular they appear to be allied with the Zygomycota or Ascomycota.

Microsporidium was once the vernacular name for a member of the class Microsporea (Corliss and Levine 1963).

Contents

Classification


See also


External links

References

  1. ^ Balbiani, G. (1882). "Sur les microsporides ou psorospermies des Articulés". Comptes rendus de l’Académie des Sciences, Paris 95: 1168–1171. 
  • Andreadis, T. G., and Hall, D. W. 1979a. Development, ultrastructure, and mode of transmission of Amblyospora sp. (Microspora) in the mosquito. J. Protozool. 26, 444–452.
  • Andreadis, T. G., and Hall, D. W. 1979b. Significance of transovarial infections of Amblyospora sp. (Microspora: Thelohaniidae) in relation to parasite maintenance in the mosquito Culex salinarius. J. Invertebr. Pathol. 34, 152–157.
  • Becnel, J. J. and Andreadis, T. G. 1998. Amblyospora salinaria n. sp. (Microsporidia: Amblyosporidae): parasite of Culex salinarius (Diptera: Culicidae), its life stages in an intermediate host and establishment as a new species. J. Invertebr. Pathol. 71:258-262.
  • Corliss, J.O. and Levine, N.D. 1963. Establishment of the Microsporidia as a new class in the protozoan subphylum Cnidospora.. J. Protozool., 10 (Suppl.), 26-27.
  • Jahn, G. C., Hall, D.W., and Zam, S. G. 1986. A comparison of the life cycles of two Amblyospora (Microspora: Amblyosporidae) in the mosquitoes Culex salinarius and Culex tarsalis Coquillett. J. Florida Anti-Mosquito Assoc. 57, 24–27.
  • Patrick J. Keeling et al. (2000). Evidence from Beta-Tubulin Phylogeny that Microsporidia Evolved From Within the Fungi. Molecular Biology and Evolution 17:23-31.
  • Nature 414, 401 - 402 (22 November 2001); doi:10.1038/35106666

Wikipedia content modification information:

  • This page was last modified on 12 August 2008, at 22:49.

Wikipedia Authorship and Review

Wikipedia content provided here is not reviewed directly by MedLibrary.org. Wikipedia content is authored by an open community of volunteers and is not produced by or in any way affiliated with MedLibrary.org.

Wikipedia Usage Guidelines

This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License. It uses material from the Wikipedia article on "Microsporidia".

The URL for this specific entry is:

All Wikipedia text is available under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License. (See Copyrights for details). Wikipedia® is a registered trademark of the Wikimedia Foundation, Inc.