Updated classification of the phylum Parabasalia.
Vittorio BoscaroErick R JamesRebecca FioritoJavier Del CampoRudolf H ScheffrahnPatrick J KeelingPublished in: The Journal of eukaryotic microbiology (2024)
The phylum Parabasalia includes very diverse single-cell organisms that nevertheless share a distinctive set of morphological traits. Most are harmless or beneficial gut symbionts of animals, but some have turned into parasites in other body compartments, the most notorious example being Trichomonas vaginalis in humans. Parabasalians have garnered attention for their nutritional symbioses with termites, their modified anaerobic mitochondria (hydrogenosomes), their character evolution, and the wholly unique features of some species. The molecular revolution confirmed the monophyly of Parabasalia, but considerably changed our view of their internal relationships, prompting a comprehensive reclassification 14 years ago. This classification has remained authoritative for many subgroups despite a greatly expanded pool of available data, but the large number of species and sequences that have since come out allow for taxonomic refinements in certain lineages, which we undertake here. We aimed to introduce as little disruption as possible but at the same time ensure that most taxa are truly monophyletic, and that the larger clades are subdivided into meaningful units. In doing so, we also highlighted correlations between the phylogeny of parabasalians and that of their hosts.
Keyphrases
- machine learning
- deep learning
- single cell
- genetic diversity
- microbial community
- working memory
- rna seq
- wastewater treatment
- big data
- cell death
- electronic health record
- genome wide
- artificial intelligence
- high throughput
- reactive oxygen species
- sewage sludge
- endoplasmic reticulum
- heavy metals
- risk assessment
- plasmodium falciparum