Zoopagomycotina

Zoopagomycotina
Fertile heads of Piptocephalis
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Fungi
Subkingdom: incertae sedis
Division: Zoopagomycotina
Families

See text

The Zoopagomycotina are a subdivision (incertae sedis) of the fungal division Zygomycota sensu lato.[1] It contains 5 families and 20 genera.[2] Relationships among and within subphyla of Zygomycota are poorly understood and their monophyly remains in question so they are sometimes referred to by the informal name, “zygomycetes”.

Zoopagomycotina are microscopic and they are typically obligate parasites of other zygomycete fungi and of microscopic soil animals such as nematodes, rotifers, and amoebae.[3] Some species are endoparasites that live mostly within the bodies of their hosts and only exit the host when they are producing spores. Other species are ectoparasites (e.g. Syncephalis, Piptocephalis)[2] that live outside of the host body, but produce specialized organs called haustoria that penetrate inside of the host body to capture host nutrients. Similar haustoria are found in biotrophic plant, animal, and fungal pathogens in several other major fungal lineages.

Like most other zygomycete fungi, the Zoopagomycotina have cell walls containing chitin and they have coenocytic (nonseptate) hyphae. Their vegetative body consists of a simple, branched, or unbranched thallus. Asexual reproduction is by arthrospores (in Helicocephalum), chlamydospores, uni- or multi-spored sporganiola; sporangiospores of multi-spored formed in simple or branched chains (merosporangia), usually from a vesicle or stalk. Many produce haustoria. Where observed, the sexual spores (zygospores) are globose and unornamented. The hyphae used during sexual outcrossing is similar to vegetative hyphae or in some cases may be slightly enlarged.[1]

Etymology

The word Zoopagomycotina comes from the Greek roots zoo meaning “animal” and pag meaning “rock” or “ice/frost.”[4]

Evolutionary Relationships

Currently accepted phyla and subphyla in kingdom Fungi
Phylogeny of Zygomycota

Although great strides have been made in resolving the evolutionary relationships among many lineages of fungi[5] it has been challenging to resolve relationships within and among zygomycetes. For example, the uncertain grouping of Zoophagus insidians with the Kickxellomycotina.[1]

Resolving a well-supported monophyly of the Zoopagomycotina has been particularly challenging for several main reasons: 1) most species of Zoopagomycotina are microscopic and challenging to observe, 2) most species of Zoopagomycotina cannot be grown separately from their host organisms in axenic culture, so obtaining pure DNA for molecular studies is challenging, and 3) based on ribosomal DNA sequences, species of Zoopagomycotina may have undergone accelerated evolution, so grouping may be skewed by long-branch attraction (LBA) and a high frequency of parallel evolutionary changes.[6]

Families and their respective genera

Cochlonemataceae

Amoebophilus (6 spp.) ectoparasite of amoebae
Aplectosoma (1 sp.) parasite of an amoeba
Bdellospora (1 sp.) ectoparasite of an amoeba
Cochlonema (19 spp.) endoparasites of amoebae and rhizopods
Endocochlus (4 spp.) endoparasites of amoebae
Euryancale (5 spp. ) endoparasites of nematodes

Helicocephalidaceae

Brachymyces (1 sp.) parasitic on bdelloid rotifers
Helicocephalum (5 spp.) parasites of small animals, especially nematodes and nematode eggs
Rhopalomyces (8 spp.) parasites of small animals, especially nematodes and nematode eggs

Piptocephalidaceae

Kuzuhaea (1 sp.) haustorial parasite of fungi (mostly of Mucorales spp.)
Piptocephalis (25 spp.) haustorial parasite of fungi (mostly of Mucorales spp.)
Syncephalis (61 spp.) haustorial parasite of fungi (mostly of Mortierellales and Mucorales spp.)

Sigmoideomycetaceae

Reticulocephalis (2 spp.) putative haustorial parasite of fungi
Sigmoideomyces (2 spp.) putative haustorial parasite of fungi
Thamnocephalis (3 spp.) haustorial parasite of fungi

Zoopagaceae

Acaulopage (27 spp.) haustorial parasites of amoeba
Cystopage (7 spp.) haustorial parasites of amoebae and nematodes
Stylopage (18 spp.) predaceous on amoebae and nematodes
Zoopage (11 spp.) haustorial parasite of amoebae and testaceous rhizopods
Zoophagus (5 spp.) ectoparasites of loricate rotifers and nematodes[2]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Hibbett DS, Binder M, Bischoff JF, et al. (May 2007). "A higher-level phylogenetic classification of the Fungi". Mycol. Res. 111 (Pt 5): 509–47. PMID 17572334. doi:10.1016/j.mycres.2007.03.004.
  2. 1 2 3 url=http://zygomycetes.org/index.php?id=8
  3. url=http://www.tolweb.org/Zygomycota
  4. url=http://www.oed.com
  5. James TY, Kauff F, Schoch CL, Matheny PB, Hofstetter V, Cox CJ, et al. (2006). "Reconstructing the early evolution of Fungi using a six-gene phylogeny". Nature. 443 (Pt 7113): 818–822. PMID 17051209. doi:10.1038/nature05110.
  6. White MM, et al. (2006). "Phylogeny of the Zygomycota based on nuclear ribosomal sequence data". Mycologia. 98 (Pt 6): 872–884. PMID 17486964. doi:10.3852/mycologia.98.6.872.
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