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Protists

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Title: Protists


1
Protists
  • Chapter 29

2
Domain EukaryaKingdom Protista
  • Protists are the most diverse of the four
    eukaryotic kingdoms
  • -Unicellular, colonial and multicellular groups
  • The Kingdom Protista is paraphyletic
  • Some protists are surrounded by Extracellular
    Material deposited outside of the plasma membrane

3
15 Major Phyla ... 7 Monophyletic Groups that
may actually be Superphyla, Phyla, Classes, or
Orders
-The 15 major protist phyla are grouped into
seven major monophyletic groups -However, 60
lineages cannot be placed with confidence
4
15 Major Phyla ... 7 Monophyletic Groups that
may actually be Phyla, Classes, or Orders
5
Eukaryotic Origins
  • Eukaryotic cells differ from prokaryotes by the
    presence of a cytoskeleton and organelles
  • Appearance of eukaryotes in microfossils occurred
    about 1.5 BYA

6
Eukaryotic Origins
  • The nucleus and endoplasmic reticulum arose from
    infoldings of prokaryotic cell membrane

7
  • Many organelles evolved via
  • endosymbiosis between an
  • ancestral eukaryote and a
  • bacterial cell

Over time, most organellar genes moved into the
nucleus -Therefore, these organelles cannot be
grown in pure culture
8
Secondary endosymbiosis -Red and green algae
engulfed cyanobacteria -Brown algae ancestor
engulfed red algae
9
General Biology of the Protists
  • Nutrition
  • -Phototrophs
  • -Heterotrophs
  • -Phagotrophs Particulate food matter
  • -Osmotrophs Soluble food matter
  • Uptake of dissolved organic
    compounds by osmosis for nutrition.
  • -Mixotrophs are both phototrophic and
    heterotrophic

10
General Biology of the Protists
  • Asexual reproduction
  • -Typical mode of reproduction
  • -Some species have an unusual mitosis
  • -Binary fission Equal cells
  • -Budding Progeny cell smaller
  • -Schizogony (skitz-awe-gony) Multiple fission
    of nucleus and then cytoplasm
  • Sexual reproduction
  • -Union of haploid gametes which are produced by
    meiosis

11
Order Diplomonadida Class Parabasalia
  • -Are closely related to the early, now extinct
  • eukaryotic cell
  • -Flagellated

-Lack mitochondria May have lost it
Diplomonads -Have two nuclei -Giardia
intestinalis
Parabasalids (Par-uh-bay-sil-ids) -Have
undulating membranes -Trichomonas vaginalis
12
Phylum Euglenozoa (you-glee-no-zo-uh)
  • Euglenoids were among the earliest eukaryotes to
    possess mitochondria
  • -1/3rd have chloroplasts

-All have a flexible pellicle
(cell membrane support...protein strips under
cell membrane tough flexible)
This is a picture of a specimen from Genus
Euglena
-Stigma Movement towards light
13
Phylum Euglenozoa
  • Class Kinetoplastida (Kinetoplastids)
  • -Kinetoplast DNA inaA unique, single
    mitochondrion with 2 types of DNA, maxicircles
    and minicircles (expressed genes are used in RNA
    editing and glycolysis)
  • -Family Trypanosomatids (trypanosomes) cause
    human diseases
  • -African sleeping sickness Tsetse (set-see)
    fly
  • -Escapes immune systems because only one of
  • 1000-2000 variable antigen genes is
    expressed at a
  • time on the glycoprotein coat

14
Superphylum Alveolata (al-vee-oh-luh-ta)
  • Alveolata have flattened vesicles called alveoli
  • -These function like Golgi bodies below the cell
    membrane

15
Superphylum Alveolata
  • Phylum Dinoflagellates
  • -Unicellular with two unequal flagella (encased
    by cellulose-like material with silica)
  • -Live in aquatic environments
  • -Most are photosynthetic

-Reproduction is primarily asexual -About 20
species produce powerful toxins that harm
vertebrates...Blooms are responsible for red
tide--kills marine vertebrates
16
  • Superphylum Alveolata
  • Phylum Apicomplexa....Apicomplexans
    (Spore-forming animal parasites)
  • Genus Plasmodium
  • -An apicomplexan that causes malaria
  • -Organism has a very complex life cycle

17
Superphylum Alveolata
  • Phylum Ciliophora (Ciliates)
  • Genus Paramecium
  • -Have two types of nuclei
  • -Macronucleus Divides by mitosis...after
    asexual reproduction
  • -Responsible for physiological functions
  • -Micronucleus Divides by meiosis
  • -Involved in a nucleus exchange conjugation
  • -Fusion of two nuclei from cells of different
  • mating types creates a new diploid
    nucleus

18
Genus Paramecium
19
(Alveoli form supportive pellicle)
  • -Food vacuoles Digestion of food
  • -Contractile vacuoles Regulation of water
  • balance
  • Killer strains have an endosymbiotic bacterium.
    If non-killer strains
  • take it up, the toxin in the bacteria is
    released.

20
Phylum Stramenopila (stra-men-awe-pil-uh)
  • Stramenopiles (....awe-pil-eez) have very fine
    hairs on their flagella during motile life cycle
    stage

-A few species have lost their hairs during
evolution
21
Phylum Stramenopila
  • Class Phaeophyceae (Brown algae)
  • -Kelps
  • -Grow in relatively shallow waters throughout
    the world

-Life cycle involves alternation of generations
-Sporophyte Multicellular and
diploid -Gametophyte Multicellular and haploid
22
Class Phaeophyceae (Brown algae) -Kelps
23
Phylum Stramenopila
  • Diatoms (Subphylum Chrysophyta, Class
    Bacillariophyceae)
  • -Unicellular organisms(photosynthetic)
  • -Have unique double shells made of opaline
    (oh-pa-lean) silica
  • -Some move using raphes (Pronounced
    "RAY-fee")--lined with vibrating fibrils

24
Phylum Rhodophyta
Rhodophyta, or red algae, range from microscopic
to very large sizes (ice cream, sushi rolls,
makeup). Carrageenan (polysaccharide food
additivehas toxicity) -Have accessory
photosynthetic pigments within phycobilisomes
(phyco-bile-e-sohm)
25
Class Choanoflagellatea
  • Choanoflagellates are most like the common
    ancestor of all animals
  • -Single emergent flagellum, surrounded by
    funnel-shaped contractile collar
  • -Use collar to feed on bacteria

26
Protists Without a Clade
  • Amoebas are paraphyletic
  • -Phylum Rhizopoda (rye-zawe-ped-uh)
  • (True amoebas)
  • -Move by means of cytoplasmic projections
    called pseudopods
  • -Phylum Actinopoda (actin-awe-ped-uh)
    (Radiolarians)
  • -Glassy exoskeletons made of
  • silica
  • -Needlelike pseudopods

27
Protists Without a Clade
  • Phylum Foraminifera (for-rah-mi-ni-feruh) are
    heterotrophic marine protists
  • -Have pore-studded shells (eg ca
    carbonate)called tests, through which thin podia
    emerge (for swimming and feeding)
  • -Have complex life cycles with haploid and
    diploid generations
  • -Limestones
  • are rich in forams
  • fossils
  • -White cliffs
  • of Dover

28
Slime molds w/o a clade
  • 1. Phylum Myxomycota, Plasmodial slime molds
  • -Stream along as a plasmodium, a nonwalled,
    multinucleate mass of cytoplasm
  • -Ingests bacteria and other organic material
  • -When food or moisture is scarce, organism forms
    sporangia, where spores are produced

29
Slime molds w/o a clade
  • 2. Phylum Acrasiomycota Cellular slime molds
  • -Individual organisms behave as separate amoebas
  • -Move through soil ingesting bacteria
  • -When food is scarce, organisms aggregate to
    form a moving slug via cAMP signal
  • -Slug differentiates into a sorocarp with spores
    that differentiate into amoebas again
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