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Protists

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Title: Protists


1
  • Protists
  • simple eukaryotic organisms
  • that are not fungi, plants, or animals
  • include many lineages of mostly single-celled
    eukaryotes, some distantly related to one
    another
  • no single trait is unique to protists

2
diplomonads
parabasalids
trypanosomes
euglenoids
radiolarians
foraminiferans
ancestral cells
ciliates
dinoflagellates
Alveolates
apicomplexans
water molds
diatoms
Stramenopiles
brown algae
red algae
Green Algae
chlorophyte algae
charophyte algae
land plants
amoebas
Amoebozoans
slime molds
fungi
choanoflagellates
animals
3
Organization and Nutrition
  • most protists are single-celled
  • but some are colonial or multicellular
  • can be autotrophs or heterotrophs
  • a few can switch between modes!
  • some heterotrophs are beneficial endosymbionts in
    larger organisms
  • others are parasites that cause disease

4
Autotrophs
  • chloroplasts
  • evolved in autotrophic protists by two
    mechanisms
  • primary endosymbiosis
  • cyanobacteria were engulfed by a heterotrophic
    cell and later evolved into chloroplasts
  • secondary endosymbiosis
  • protists engulfed red or green algae that already
    contained chloroplasts

5
Three General Protist Life Cycles
  • Protists show great diversity in life cycles
  • most reproduce both sexually and asexually
  • haploid dominated (zygote is the only diploid
    cell)
  • diploid dominated (only gametes are haploid)
  • alternation of generations (haploid diploid
    generations)

6
Diploid Dominant Cycle
mitosis
single cells or multicelled body
zygote
diploid (2n)
meiosis
fertilization
haploid (n)
gametes
7
Haploid Dominant Cycle
zygote
diploid (2n)
meiosis
fertilization
haploid (n)
gametes
haploid cells
single cells or multicelled body
mitosis
8
Alternation of Generations
mitosis
multicelled body
zygote
diploid (2n)
meiosis
fertilization
haploid (n)
spores
gametes
multicelled body
mitosis
9
What are protists?
  • protists do not have a specific defining trait
  • they are a collection of many eukaryotic lineages
    rather than a clade
  • most protists are single-celled
  • but there are multicellular and colonial species
  • are autotrophs and / or heterotrophs
  • have three types of life cycles

10
Flagellated Protozoans
  • single-celled protists
  • covered by a pellicle made of proteins that help
    cells retain shape
  • swim in lakes, seas, and the body fluids of
    animals
  • all are entirely or mostly heterotrophic
  • life cycle is dominated by haploid cells that
    reproduce by mitosis

11
Anaerobic Flagellates
  • have multiple flagella and live in oxygen-poor
    waters
  • some infect humans and cause disease
  • Giardia lamblia intestinal parasite
  • Trichomonas vaginalis sexually transmitted
    disease

12
Trypanosomes Kinetoplastids
  • Kinetoplastids are flagellated protozoans with a
    single large mitochondrion
  • Trypanosomes include human pathogens that are
    transmitted by insects
  • African sleeping sickness ?Trypanosoma brucei by
    tsetse flies
  • Chagas disease ? T. cruzi spread by bloodsucking
    bugs

13
Euglenoids
  • flagellated protists that do not infect humans
  • most prey on bacteria
  • some have chloroplasts that evolved from green
    algae and can detect light with an eyespot
  • most live in freshwater and have contractile
    vacuoles that expel excess water

flagellum
nucleus
mitochondrion
chloroplast
14
contractile vacuole
chloroplast
flagellum
eyespot
nucleus
ER
pellicle
Golgi body
mitochondrion
15
What are flagellated protozoans?
  • Flagellated protozoans are single-celled protists
    with one or more flagella they are typically
    heterotrophic and reproduce asexually by mitosis
  • Some have adapted to life in oxygen-poor waters
    some members of these groups commonly infect
    humans and cause disease
  • Trypanosomes include human pathogens that are
    transmitted by insects
  • Euglenoids do not infect humans most prey on
    bacteria, but some have chloroplasts that evolved
    from green algae

16
Foraminiferans Radiolarians
  • single cells with chalky / glassy shells
  • live in great numbers in the worlds oceans
  • their remains ?limestone, chalk, and chert rocks
  • heterotrophs that capture organic debris and tiny
    organisms on cytoplasmic extensions that stick
    out through the shells openings
  • a few species of foraminifera and most
    radiolarians are members of the marine plankton
  • a collection of mostly microscopic
    organisms that drift / swim in open waters
  • planktonic foraminifera radiolarians often have
    smaller photosynthetic protists (diatoms or
    algae) living inside them

17
Chalky-Shelled Foraminiferans
  • single celled protists that secrete a CaCO3 shell
  • helps stabilize atmospheric CO2 levels buffers
    seawater pH
  • shells accumulate as chalk or limestone
  • most foraminiferans live on the seafloor
  • others drift as part of the marine plankton

18
Glassy-Shelled Radiolarians
  • heterotrophic protists that secrete silica shells
    beneath their plasma membrane
  • most are part of the marine plankton
  • vacuoles filled with air keep radiolarians afloat
  • geologic processes transform silica-rich
    radiolarian ooze into chert

19
What are foraminifera radiolarians?
  • related lineages of heterotrophic
  • single cellular protista
  • that live mainly in seawater
  • foraminifera make a calcium carbonate shell
  • most live on the seafloor, a few are planktonic
  • radiolarians have a glassy silica shell
  • most are planktonic

20
  • Three groups of protists
  • ciliates
  • dinoflagellates
  • apicomplexans
  • are alveolates having a layer of sacs under the
    plasma membrane

21
  • Ciliates
  • heterotrophic single cellular protista
  • move about with the help of cilia
  • most ciliates are free-living predators that hunt
    bacteria, other protists, and one another in
    freshwater habitats and the oceans
  • e.g. Paramecium cilia - video video 2
  • Balantidium coli is a parasite of humans
  • reproduce asexually by binary fission or sexually
    by exchanging haploid micronuclei

22
prey
prey disappearing into predators oral opening
predator
23
contractile vacuole
pellicle
24
gullet
cilia
food vacuole (being emptied)
trichocysts
cilium
pellicle
empty contractile vacuole
filled contractile vacuole
alveolus
macronucleus
intact trichocyst
micronucleus
25
What are ciliates?
  • heterotrophic single cellular protista
  • move about with the help of cilia
  • most are free-living predators
  • but some live inside animals
  • Ciliates, Dinoflagellates Apicomplexans, are
    Alveolates group characterized by having tiny
    sacs beneath their plasma membrane

26
  • Dinoflagellates whirling flagellates
  • mostly marine single-celled alveolate protists
  • typically have two flagella
  • one extends from the base of the cell
  • the other wraps around the cells middle
  • some are predators or parasites
  • others are photosynthetic members of the
    plankton or symbionts in corals

27
  • Algal blooms
  • great increases in free-living photosynthetic
    dinoflagellates or other protists in habitats
    enriched with nutrients such as agricultural
    runoff
  • blooms of certain species cause red tides
  • that can sicken humans and kill aquatic organisms
  • some dinoflagellates toxins kill directly
    Karenia brevis causes neurotoxic shellfish
    poisoning

28
Bioluminescent Dinoflagellates
29
What are dinoflagellates?
  • mostly marine single-celled alveolate protists
  • some are predators or parasites
  • others are photosynthetic members of plankton or
    symbionts in corals
  • algal blooms a population explosion of protists
  • can harm aquatic organisms human health

30
  • Apicomplexans
  • parasitic alveolates
  • spend part of their life inside host cells
  • Plasmodium ? malaria
  • Toxoplasma gondii ? toxoplasmosis
  • infect a variety of animals worms to insects to
    humans
  • life cycle may involve more than one species

31
  • Malaria
  • the most studied apicomplexan disease
  • is a major cause of human death
  • a female Anopheles mosquito transmits a motile
    infective cell sporozoite to a vertebrate such
    as a human
  • fever and weakness start a week or two after a
    bite
  • when infected liver cells rupture and release
    merozoites and cellular debris into the
    bloodstream
  • symptoms may subside, but continued infection
    harms the body and eventually kills the host

32
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33
Evolution of Plasmodium
  • Plasmodium is a single-celled protist that causes
    malaria
  • Plasmodium-infected blood cells that get into the
    brain can cause blindness, seizures, coma, and
    death
  • Mortality from malaria has driven up the
    frequency of sickle-cell anemia alleles (HbS) in
    some human populations
  • Plasmodium species that infects humans is
    descended from a parasite that infects gorillas
    in western Africa
  • Researchers detected bits of Plasmodium DNA in
    the 3,500-year-old mummy of the Egyptian pharaoh
    Tutankhamun
  • Plasmodium manipulates its mosquito and human
    hosts to maximize its own survival

34
Life Cycle of Plasmodium
merozoites
mosquito takes up gametocytes or injects
sporozoites
35
Toxoplasmosis
  • many people infected by Toxoplasma gondii have no
    apparent symptoms
  • but toxoplasmosis can be fatal in
    immune-suppressed people, such as those with AIDS
  • T. gondii infection during pregnancy can cause
    neurological birth defects in offspring
  • most people become infected by eating cysts in
    undercooked meat
  • or by contact with cats that prey on rodents
    birds

36
  • Stramenopiles
  • colorless filamentous molds
  • photosynthetic single cells
  • large seaweeds
  • most stramenopiles are autotrophs
  • with chloroplasts that contain a brown accessory
    pigment fucoxanthin, along with chlorophylls a
    c
  • stramenopile chloroplasts are thought to have
    evolved from a red alga by secondary
    endosymbiosis

37
  • Water molds oomycotes
  • heterotrophs that form a mesh of filaments made
    up of diploid cells with cellulose cell walls
  • decompose organic matter in aquatic habitats
  • aquatic parasites e.g. Saprolegnia
  • infect plants e.g. Phytophthora
  • plant destroyers
  • an estimated 5 billion crop losses per year

38
Saprolegnia on infected fish
39
Phytopthora plant destroyers
40
  • Diatoms
  • single-celled or colonial aquatic protists
  • have a two-part silica shell and reproduce
    asexually
  • most are photosynthetic
  • with a brown accessory pigment fucoxanthin
  • major components of phytoplankton
  • shells accumulate on the seafloor and form
    diatomaceous earth

41
http//www.micromagus.net/microscopes/pondlife_pla
nts01.html
42
  • Brown Algae
  • multicellular protists
  • live in temperate or cool coastal waters
  • 1,500 species range in size from microscopic
    filaments to giant kelps 30 meters (100 feet)
    tall
  • some are used commercially as
  • thickeners algins
  • food
  • fertilizer
  • herbal supplements
  • bladderwrack

43
  • Giant Kelps
  • form forest-like stands in coastal waters of the
    Pacific NW
  • kelp life cycle is an alternation of generations
    in which a 2n spore-bearing body is the large,
    long-lived stage
  • microscopic gamete-forming bodies form during the
    shorter, haploid stage of the life cycle

bladder
stipe
blade
holdfast
44
kelp forest 3 min. video
45
  • Red algae
  • mostly multicellular
  • marine algae that live in clear, warm waters
  • red accessory pigments phycobilins allow red
    algae to live at greater depths than other algae
  • most grow as thin sheets or in a branching
    pattern
  • coralline algae has hardened deposits of CaCO3
  • have many commercial uses
  • agar
  • carrageenan
  • nori ? Porphyra

46
  • Green algae
  • protists most similar to land plants
  • have cellulose in their cell walls
  • store sugars as starch
  • have chloroplasts descended from cyanobacteria
  • include two lineages of photosynthetic,
    single-celled and multicellular species
  • chlorophytes
  • charophytes

47
  • Chlorophyte Algae
  • the largest lineage of green algae, including
    both freshwater and marine species
  • Chlorella - single celled, grown as health food
  • Chlamydomonas - single celled, freshwater alga
  • Volvox - colonial, freshwater alga
  • Cladophora - forms long filaments
  • Ulva - sea lettuce
  • Codium fragile - branching marine alga

48
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49
  • Charophyte Algae
  • include several lineages of freshwater green
    algae that form a clade with land plants
  • some live as single-cells, others form strands of
    cells, and others have a complex body
  • Chara stoneworts are the charophyte algae most
    closely related to land plants
  • have plasmodesmata
  • divide their cytoplasm by cell plate formation

50
What are green algae?
  • photosynthetic protists
  • single cellular or multicellular
  • like land plants
  • they have cellulose in their cell walls
  • store sugars as starch
  • have chloroplasts ? from cyanobacteria
  • most green algae are chlorophytes
  • the smaller group of charophyte algae are the
    closest relatives of the land plants

51
Amoebozoans Choanoflagellates
  • heterotrophic protista
  • closely linked to fungi and animals
  • provide clues to how signaling pathways of
    multicellular organisms evolved

52
  • Amoebozoans
  • send out pseudopods
  • move about
  • capture food
  • most have no cell walls, shell, or pellicles
  • Amoebas live as single cells
  • e.g. Amoeba proteus freshwater predator
  • video 1 eating green algae
  • video 2 eating Paramecium
  • Slime molds are social amoebas
  • two types plasmodial cellular slime molds

53
  • Cellular Slime Molds
  • spend most of their lives as individual amoeboid
    cells that feed on bacteria and reproduce by
    mitosis
  • when food runs out, thousands of cells form a
    slug that migrates, forms a fruiting body, and
    produces spores and new diploid amoeboid cells
  • e.g. Dictyostelium discoideum
  • description, pictures short video
  • video 3 min in German
  • video 12 min

54
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55
  • Plasmodial Slime Molds
  • spend most of their lives as a plasmodium a
    streaming multinucleated mass that feeds on
    microbes and organic matter
  • when food supplies dwindle, a plasmodium develops
    into spore-bearing fruiting bodies
  • e.g. Physarum video

56
  • Choanoflagellates
  • aquatic, heterotrophic protists
  • the closest known protist relatives of animals
  • a choanoflagellate cell has a flagellum
    surrounded by a collar of microvilli that sets
    up a current and allows the collar to strain food
    from the water
  • sponges, the simplest animals, have similar cells

57
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58
What are amoebozoans and choanoflagellates?
  • Amoebozoans are a recently recognized lineage
    that includes amoebas and slime molds all are
    unwalled heterotrophs that feed and move by
    extending cytoplasmic extensions (pseudopods)
  • Choanoflagellates are flagellated, heterotrophic
    cells that are considered to be close relatives
    of the animals they resemble sponge cells

Diversity of Protists video 22 min.
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