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Encyclopedia > Spirotrich
Spirotrichs
Scientific classification
Kingdom: Protista
Phylum: Ciliophora
Class: Spirotrichea
Bütschli 1889
Typical sublasses

Subclass Hypotrichia
Subclass Stichotrichia
Subclass Oligotrichia
Subclass Choreotrichia

The spirotrichs are a large and distinctive group of ciliate protozoa. They typically have prominent oral cilia in the form of a series of polykinetids, called the adoral zone of membranelles, beginning anterior to the oral cavity and running down to the left side of the mouth. There may also one or two paroral membranes on its right side. The body cilia are fused to form polykinetids called cirri in some, and are sparse to absent in others.


Forms with cirri are common throughout soil, freshwater, and marine environments. Individuals tend to be flattened, with cirri confined to the ventral surface. These are variously used for crawling over objects, acting as feet, swimming, or assisting in food capture. Again, they are generally divided into hypotrichs and stichotrichs, but were originally all considered hypotrichs.


Forms with sparse or absent body cilia tend to be smaller and are mostly marine, but a few are common in freshwater. They are generally divided into oligotrichs and choreotrichs, but were originally all considered oligotrichs. The latter group includes the tintinnids, which produce loricae or shells and are the predominant fossil ciliates.


As first defined by Bütschli in 1889 the spirotrichs were one of two orders, together with the now-abandoned holotrichs, and included all ciliates with prominent oral cilia: heterotrichs, hypotrichs, oligotrichs, and peritrichs, although the last were soon separated. The heterotrichs have an adoral zone of membranelles, but molecular and ultrastructure studies have shown they are a separate group that diverged from most other ciliates early on. A few of the smaller groups included with them may be genuine spirotrichs, however, such as the Protocruziida.


The remaining spirotrichs form a monophyletic group, but their relationships are uncertain. For the most part the oligotrichs and choreotrichs appear to form closely related, natural groups. However Halteria and its close relatives, originally considered oligotrichs, form a separate group and may even be modified stichotrichs. Studies also suggest the hypotrichs are paraphyletic to the stichotrichs, and possibly to the oligotrichs and choreotrichs as well. This stands in contrast to the earlier belief that they were the most advanced of all protozoa.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Portal to Protistology: Stichotrich Molecular Biology (2040 words)
Spirotrichs have been studied since the 1800s, the old literature on life history insightfully re-synthesized by Bell (1988).
The present era of molecular genetics of Spirotrichs (review: Klobutcher and Prescott 1986) was opened by Dieter Ammermann's doctoral research, when he demonstrated polytene chromosomes in the developing macronucleus (MAC) of Stylonychia (Ammermann 1964) and laid out the time-course of cytogenetic events of this spectacular process (Ammermann 1965).
A note of caution: Katz and Riley (2001) argue that the process of generation of "gene-sized" MAC chromosomes has evolved independently in a variety of ciliate lineages; hence, this character is not a valid basis for phylogenetic inference.
A Micronuclear Locus Containing Three Protein-Coding Genes Remains Linked During Macronuclear Development in the ... (5616 words)
Whether this number holds for spirotrich species in general is not known, but it seems reasonable given that the average macronuclear chromosome size is similar in the spirotrichs studied to date (Klobutcher and Herrick 1997; Prescott 1994).
Given the paucity of multi-gene macronuclear chromosomes known in spirotrichs, we were surprised to find what appeared to be a three- gene macronuclear chromosome in a species of Holosticha, a freshwater spirotrich evolutionary distinct from the more commonly studied Euplotids and Oxytrichids.
Cbs sequences in the spirotrichous species Euplotes and Stylonychia are generally found in macronuclear sequences, while the sequences in Tetrahymena are found on micronuclear DNA and removed during macronuclear development.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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