| Microbiology, 5/e Lansing M Prescott,
Augustana College Donald A Klein,
Colorado State University John P Harley,
Eastern Kentucky University
The Protozoa
Study Outline- Introduction
- Protozoa are a polyphyletic group of organisms
- Protozoa are unicellular, eucaryotic protists that are usually motile
- Protozoology is the study of protozoa
- Distribution
- Primarily in moist habitats, including freshwater, marine, and moist terrestrial environments
- Most are free living, but some are parasitic in plants and animals
- Importance
- Serve as an important link in food chains and food webs (zooplankton)
- Food chain-series of organisms, each feeding on the preceding one
- Food web-complex interlocking series of food chains
- Important in the study of biochemistry and molecular biology because they use the same metabolic pathways as multicellular eucaryotes
- Causative agents of some important diseases in humans and other animals
- Morphology
- Many aspects of their morphology are the same as those of cells of multicellular animals; however, protozoa have some unique features
- Ectoplasm is the gelatinous cytoplasm just inside the plasma membrane; it provides some rigidity and shape
- Pellicle consists of the plasma membrane and the structures immediately beneath it
- Endoplasm is the more fluid cytoplasm in the interior of the cell
- Some have one nucleus, some have two or more identical nuclei, and some have two distinct types of nuclei
- The macronucleus is associated with trophic activities and regenerative processes
- The micronucleus controls reproductive activities by sequestering genetic material for exchange during reproduction
- Vacuoles are usually present
- Contractile vacuoles are osmoregulatory
- Phagocytic vacuoles are sites of food digestion
- Secretory vacuoles usually contain enzymes for specific functions, such as excystation
- Some protozoa are anaerobic (e.g., Trichonympha lives in the gut of termites)
- Most anaerobic protozoa do not have mitochondria or cytochromes, and have an incomplete TCA cycle
- Some anaerobic protozoa contain hydrogenosomes-small membrane-delimited organelles containing a unique electron transfer system that uses protons as terminal electron acceptors to form molecular hydrogen
- Nutrition
- In holozoic nutrition, nutrients are acquired by phagocytosis; some ciliates have a specialized structure, called a cytosome, for phagocytosis
- In saprozoic nutrition, nutrients are acquired by pinocytosis, diffusion, or carrier-mediated transport (facilitated diffusion or active transport)
- Encystment and Excystment
- Encystation is the development of a resting stage structure called a cyst
- The cyst is a dormant form that has a wall and greatly reduced metabolic activity
- Functions of cysts
- Protect against adverse changes in the environment
- Function as sites for nuclear reorganization and cell division
- Serve as a means of transfer from one host to another for parasitic species
- Excystation is the escape of vegetative forms, called trophozoites, from the cyst; it is usually triggered by a return to a favorable environment (e.g., such as entry into a new host for parasitic species)
- Locomotory Organelles
- A few protozoa are nonmotile
- Most use one of three major types of locomotory organelles
- Pseudopodia-cytoplasmic extensions
- Cilia-filamentous extensions (short)
- Flagella-filamentous extensions (long)
- Reproduction
- The most common method of asexual reproduction is binary fission, which involves mitosis followed by cytokinesis
- The most common type of sexual reproduction is conjugation, an exchange of gametic nuclei between paired protozoa of complementary mating types
- Classification
- The most accepted scheme classifies protozoa as a subkingdom of protists, containing seven phyla; classification is based primarily on types of nuclei, mode of reproduction, and mechanism of locomotion
- Recently, other schemes have been suggested
- Cavalier-Smith has proposed elevating the protozoa to the status of a kingdom with 18 phyla
- Molecular classification schemes suggest that the protozoa do not exist as an evolutionary taxon, but rather that the protozoa are polyphyletic
- Representative Types
- Phylum Sarcomastigophora
- This phylum includes protists with a single type of nucleus and flagella or pseudopodia; they reproduce asexually and sexually
- Subphylum Mastigophora contains both phytoflagellates (chloroplast-bearing flagellates) and zooflagellates; zooflagellates have the following characteristics:
- Do not have chlorophyll; are holozoic or saprozoic
- Asexual reproduction occurs by longitudinal binary fission; sexual reproduction is known for a few species, and encystment is common
- One group, the kinetoplastids, has mitochondrial DNA in a special region called the kinetoplast
- Some are free living; some are endosymbiotic (e.g., Trichonympha species in the intestines of termites
- Many are important human parasites (e.g., Trichomonas vaginalis, Giardia lamblia, and Trypanosoma brucei)
- Subphylum Sarcodina-contains amoeboid organisms
- Found in aquatic and terrestrial habitats, where they take up nutrients by phagocytosis and pinocytosis
- Reproduction is usually by simple asexual binary fission; some form cysts
- Some have a loose-fitting shell called a test (e.g., foraminiferans and radiolarians, which are primarily marine amoebae; a few occur in fresh or brackish water)
- Some are endosymbionts and can be either commensals or parasites; some are free-living, disease-causing amoebae
- Phylum Labyrinthomorpha
- Protists with spindle-shaped or spherical, nonamoeboid, vegetative cells; some move by gliding motion on mucous tracks
- Most members are marine organisms and are either saprozoic or parasitic on algae
- Phylum Apicomplexa
- Often called sporozoans because they have a spore-forming stage in their life cycle; lack locomotory organelles, except the male gametes and the zygotes (ookinetes); are either intra- or intercellular parasites having a characteristic structure called the apical complex
- Apical complex-a unique arrangement of fibrils, tubules, vacuoles, and other organelles at one end of the cell
- One or two polar rings at the apical end
- Conoid-spirally arranged fibers adjacent to the polar rings
- Subpellicular microtubules radiate from the polar rings and probably serve as support elements
- Rhoptries extend to the plasma membrane and secrete their contents at the cell surface (probably aids in host cell penetration)
- Micropores take in nutrients
- Have complex life cycles involving two different hosts (usually mammal and often a mosquito)
- Life cycle has both asexual and sexual phases and is characterized by an alternation of haploid and diploid generations
- At some point in the life cycle, they undergo schizogony, a rapid series of mitotic events producing a large number of small infective organisms through the formation of uninuclear buds
- Sexual reproduction involves the formation of a thick-walled oocyst after fertilization; meiosis within this structure then produces haploid infective spores
- This group includes some very important pathogens
- Plasmodium-malaria
- Cryptosporidium-cryptosporidiosis
- Toxoplasma-toxoplasmosis
- Eimeria-coccidiosis
- Phylum Microspora
- Obligately intracellular parasites lacking mitochondria and transmitted by a resistant spore
- Several economically important pathogens of insects
- There has been increased interest in their use as biological pest control
- Recently, five genera have been implicated in human diseases in immunosuppressed patients (e.g., AIDS patients)
- Phylum Acetospora-parasitic protists with spores that lack polar caps or polar filaments, parasitic in mollusks
- Phylum Myxozoa-parasitic protists with resistant spores having one to six coiled polar filaments; parasitic on freshwater and marine fish; can cause a major economic problem in cultured salmon
- Phylum Ciliophora
- The largest of the seven phyla; these organisms are distinguished by the use of cilia as locomotory organelles
- Cilia arranged in longitudinal rows or spirals
- Oblique stroke of cilia causes ciliates to rotate as they swim
- Can move forward or backward
- Numerous interesting morphological characteristics are observed: slipper-shaped cells, stalked cells, tentacles, and threadlike darts called toxicysts
- Feeding behavior
- Food is captured by action of cilia around the buccal cavity; food enters the cytostome and passes to phagocytic vacuoles that fuse with lysosomes, where digestion occurs
- After digestion the vacuoles fuse with a special region of the pellicle, called the cytoproct, which empties the cell's waste material to the outside
- Most have two types of nuclei
- Micronucleus-diploid; functions in mitosis and meiosis
- Macronucleus-polyploid for some genes; maintains routine cellular functions
- Asexual reproduction is by transverse binary fission; sexual reproduction usually is by conjugation
- Most are free-living; some are harmless commensals; others are disease-causing parasites
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