Center for Conservation Medicine and Ecosystem Health, Ross University School of Veterinary Medicine, PO Box 334, Basseterre, St. Kitts, West Indies.
Section for Genetics and Evolutionary Biology (EVOGENE), Department of Biosciences, University of Oslo, 0316 Oslo, Norway.
Curr Biol. 2017 Jun 5;27(11):1645-1651.e3. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2017.04.045. Epub 2017 May 18.
"X-cells" have long been associated with tumor-like formations (xenomas) in marine fish, including many of commercial interest. The name was first used to refer to the large polygonal cells that were found in epidermal xenomas from flatfish from the Pacific Northwest [1]. Similar looking cells from pseudobranchial xenomas had previously been reported from cod in the Atlantic [2] and Pacific Oceans [3]. X-cell pathologies have been reported from five teleost orders: Pleuronectiformes (flatfish), Perciformes (perch-like fish), Gadiformes (cods), Siluriformes (catfish), and Salmoniformes (salmonids). Various explanations have been elicited for their etiology, including being adenomas or adenocarcinomas [4, 5], virally transformed fish cells [6-8], or products of coastal pollution [9, 10]. It was hypothesized that X-cells were protozoan parasites [1, 11-13], and although recent molecular analyses have confirmed this, they have failed to place them in any phylum [14-18], demonstrating weak phylogenetic associations with the haplosporidians [16] or the alveolates [15]. Here, we sequenced rRNA genes from European and Japanese fish that are known to develop X-cell xenomas. We also generated a metagenomic sequence library from X-cell xenomas of blue whiting and Atlantic cod and assembled 63 X-cell protein-coding genes for a eukaryote-wide phylogenomic analysis. We show that X-cells group in two highly divergent clades, robustly sister to the bivalve parasite Perkinsus. We formally describe these as Gadixcellia and Xcellia and provide a phylogenetic context to catalyze future research. We also screened Atlantic cod populations for xenomas and residual pathologies and show that X-cell infections are more prevalent and widespread than previously known.
“X 细胞”长期以来一直与海洋鱼类中的肿瘤样形成(异生瘤)有关,包括许多具有商业价值的鱼类。这个名称最初用于指在来自太平洋西北地区的比目鱼的表皮异生瘤中发现的大型多边形细胞[1]。以前在大西洋[2]和太平洋[3]的鳕鱼中也报道过来自假鳃异生瘤的类似细胞。X 细胞病理学已在五个硬骨鱼目鱼类中报道:鲽形目(比目鱼)、鲈形目(鲈形鱼)、鳕形目(鳕鱼)、鲶形目(鲶鱼)和鲑形目(鲑鱼)。对于它们的病因,已经提出了各种解释,包括腺瘤或腺癌[4,5]、病毒转化的鱼类细胞[6-8]或沿海污染的产物[9,10]。有人假设 X 细胞是原生动物寄生虫[1,11-13],尽管最近的分子分析证实了这一点,但它们未能将其归入任何门[14-18],与哈孢虫[16]或肺泡虫[15]的系统发育关系较弱。在这里,我们对已知会产生 X 细胞异生瘤的欧洲和日本鱼类的 rRNA 基因进行了测序。我们还从蓝鳕鱼和大西洋鳕鱼的 X 细胞异生瘤中生成了宏基因组序列文库,并组装了 63 个 X 细胞蛋白编码基因,用于进行真核生物系统发育基因组分析。我们表明 X 细胞在两个高度分化的分支中聚集,与双壳类寄生虫 Perkinsus 密切相关。我们正式将它们描述为 Gadixcellia 和 Xcellia,并为未来的研究提供了系统发育背景。我们还筛选了大西洋鳕鱼种群中的异生瘤和残留病变,并表明 X 细胞感染比以前已知的更为普遍和广泛。