Papanin Institute for Biology of Inland Waters, Russian Academy of Sciences, Borok 152742, Russia; Department of Botany, University of British Columbia, Vancouver, BC V6T 1Z4, Canada.
Belozersky Institute for Physico-Chemical Biology, Lomonosov Moscow State University, Moscow 119992, Russia; Kharkevich Institute for Information Transmission Problems, Russian Academy of Sciences, Moscow 127051, Russia.
Curr Biol. 2020 Nov 16;30(22):4500-4509.e5. doi: 10.1016/j.cub.2020.08.061. Epub 2020 Sep 24.
The origin of animals is one of the most intensely studied evolutionary events, and our understanding of this transition was greatly advanced by analyses of unicellular relatives of animals, which have shown many "animal-specific" genes actually arose in protistan ancestors long before the emergence of animals [1-3]. These genes have complex distributions, and the protists have diverse lifestyles, so understanding their evolutionary significance requires both a robust phylogeny of animal relatives and a detailed understanding of their biology [4, 5]. But discoveries of new animal-related lineages are rare and historically biased to bacteriovores and parasites. Here, we characterize the morphology and transcriptome content of a new animal-related lineage, predatory flagellate Tunicaraptor unikontum. Tunicaraptor is an extremely small (3-5 μm) and morphologically simple cell superficially resembling some fungal zoospores, but it survives by preying on other eukaryotes, possibly using a dedicated but transient "mouth," which is unique for unicellular opisthokonts. The Tunicaraptor transcriptome encodes a full complement of flagellar genes and the flagella-associated calcium channel, which is only common to predatory animal relatives and missing in microbial parasites and grazers. Tunicaraptor also encodes several major classes of animal cell adhesion molecules, as well as transcription factors and homologs of proteins involved in neurodevelopment that have not been found in other animal-related lineages. Phylogenomics, including Tunicaraptor, challenges the existing framework used to reconstruct the evolution of animal-specific genes and emphasizes that the diversity of animal-related lineages may be better understood only once the smaller, more inconspicuous animal-related lineages are better studied. VIDEO ABSTRACT.
动物的起源是最受深入研究的进化事件之一,对动物单细胞近亲的分析极大地推动了我们对这一转变的理解,这些分析表明,许多“动物特有的”基因实际上是在动物出现之前很久就在原生生物祖先中出现的[1-3]。这些基因的分布复杂,原生生物的生活方式多种多样,因此,要理解它们的进化意义,既需要动物近亲的稳健系统发育,也需要对它们的生物学有详细的了解[4,5]。但是,新的动物相关谱系的发现非常罕见,而且历史上偏向于噬菌动物和寄生虫。在这里,我们描述了一个新的动物相关谱系——掠食性鞭毛虫 Tunicaraptor unikontum 的形态和转录组内容。Tunicaraptor 是一种非常小的(3-5μm)、形态简单的细胞,表面上类似于某些真菌游动孢子,但它通过捕食其他真核生物生存,可能使用一种专门的但短暂的“口”,这是单细胞后口动物所特有的。Tunicaraptor 的转录组编码了完整的鞭毛基因和鞭毛相关的钙通道,这只存在于掠食性动物近亲中,而在微生物寄生虫和食草动物中缺失。Tunicaraptor 还编码了几种主要类别的动物细胞粘附分子,以及转录因子和参与神经发育的蛋白质的同源物,这些在其他动物相关谱系中尚未发现。包括 Tunicaraptor 在内的系统基因组学挑战了用于重建动物特有基因进化的现有框架,并强调,只有在较小的、不太引人注目的动物相关谱系得到更好的研究之后,才能更好地理解动物相关谱系的多样性。视频摘要。