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Amoeboid Information

Amoeboids are single-celled life-forms characterized by an irregular shape.[1]

"Amoeboid" and "amœba" are often used interchangeably even by biologists[2], and especially refer to a creature moving by using pseudopodia. Most references to "amoebas" or "amoebae" are to amoeboids in general rather than to the specific genus Amoeba. The genus Amoeba and amoeboids in general both derive their names from the ancient Greek word for change.

Contents

Structure

Amoeboids move using pseudopodia, which are bulges of cytoplasm.

Amoebas breathe using their entire cell membrane that is constantly immersed in water. Excess water can cross into the cytosol. Amoebas have a contractile vacuole to expel excess water.

Food sources vary in rhizopoda. They may consume bacteria or other protists. Some are detritivores and eat dead organic material. They extend a pair of pseudopodia around food. They fuse to make a food vacuole which then fuses with a lysosome to add digestive chemicals. Undigested food is expelled at the cell membrane.

Amoebas use pseudopodia to move and feed. They are powered by flexible microfilaments near the membrane. Microfilaments are at least 50% of the cytoskeleton. The other parts are more stiff and are composed of intermediate filaments and macrotubules. These are not used in amoeboid movement, but are stiff skeletons on which organelles are supported or can move on.

The shells of amoebas are often composed of calcium. The proteins or materials are synthesised in the cell and exported just outside the cell membrane.

Amoebas seem to have connections with two phyla of the lineage fungus-like protists. The two phyla are myxomycota (plasmodial slime molds), and acrasiomycota (cellular slime molds). These two phyla use amoeboid movement in their feeding stage. One is basically a giant multinucleate amoeba, while the other lives solitary until food runs out; in which a colony of these functions as a unit. Myxomycotes use amoeboid gametes, as well.

Diversity

They have appeared in a number of different groups. Some cells in multicellular animals may be amoeboid, for instance human white blood cells, which consume pathogens. Many protists also exist as individual amoeboid cells, or take such a form at some point in their life-cycle. The most famous such organism is Amoeba proteus; the name amoeba is variously used to describe its close relatives, other organisms similar to it, or the amoeboids in general.

As amoebas themselves are polyphyletic and subject to some imprecision in definition, the term "amoeboid" does not provide identification of an organism, and is better understood as description of locomotion.

When used in the broader sense, the term can include many different groups. One source includes 97 different genera.[3] Others include far fewer.

In older classification systems, amoeboids have been divided into several morphological categories based on the form and structure of the pseudopods. Those where the pseudopods are supported by regular arrays of microtubules are called actinopods, and forms where they are not are called rhizopods, further divided into lobose, filose, and reticulose amoebae. There is also a strange group of giant marine amoeboids, the xenophyophores, that do not fall into any of these categories.

More modern classifications are based upon cladistics. It has been stated that most amoeboid are now grouped in Amoebozoa or Rhizaria.[4] However, in contexts where "amoeboid" is defined more loosely, there are many amoeboid species that are in the Excavata clade.

Phylogenetic analyses place these genera into the following groups (not all of these are considered amoeboid (or "amoebas") by all sources):

Grouping Genus Morphology
Chromalveolate Heterokont: Hyalodiscus, Labyrinthula Alveolata: Pfiesteria
Rhizaria Filosa: Gyromitus Endomyxa: Vampyrella
  • Filose pseudopods (Filosa): Filose pseudopods are narrow and tapering. The vast majority of filose amoebae, including all those that produce shells, are placed within the Cercozoa together with various flagellates that tend to have amoeboid forms. The naked filose amoebae also includes vampyrellids.
  • Reticulose pseudopods (Endomyxa): Reticulose pseudopods are cytoplasmic strands that branch and merge to form a net. They are found most notably among the Foraminifera, a large group of marine protists that generally produce multi-chambered shells. There are only a few sorts of naked reticulose amoeboids, notably the gymnophryids, and their relationships are not certain.
  • Radiolarians are a subgroup of actinopods that are now grouped with rhizarians.
Excavata Vahlkampfiidae: Naegleria, Neovahlkampfia, Paratetramitus, Paravahlkampfia, Psalteriomonas, Sawyeria, Tetramitus, Vahlkampfia, Willaertia Parabasalidea: Dientamoeba, Histomonas Other: Stachyamoeba, Rosculus, Acrasis, Heteramoeba, Learamoeba, Macropharyngomonas, Monopylocystis, Stygamoeba
Amoebozoa Lobosea: Acanthamoeba, Amoeba, Balamuthia, Chaos, Clydonella, Discamoeba, Echinamoeba, Filamoeba, Flabellula, Gephyramoeba, Glaeseria, Hartmannella, Hydramoeba, Korotnevella, Leptomyxa, Lingulamoeba, Mastigina, Mayorella, Metachaos, Neoparamoeba, Paramoeba, Polychaos, Phreatamoeba, Platyamoeba, Protoacanthamoeba, Rhizamoeba, Saccamoeba, Sappinia, Stereomyxa, Thecamoeba, Trichamoeba, Trichosphaerium, Unda, Vannella, Vexillifera Conosa: Endamoeba, Entamoeba, Hyperamoeba, Mastigamoeba, Mastigella, Pelomyxa
  • Lobose pseudopods (Lobosea): Lobose pseudopods are blunt, and there may be one or several on a cell, which is usually divided into a layer of clear ectoplasm surrounding more granular endoplasm.
Nucleariid Micronuclearia, Nuclearia
Ungrouped/ unknown Adelphamoeba, Astramoeba, Cashia, Dactylamoeba, Dinamoeba, Flagellipodium, Flamella, Gibbodiscus, Gocevia, Gruberella, Hollandella, Iodamoeba, Malamoeba, Nollandia, Oscillosignum, Paragocevia, Parvamoeba, Pernina, Pontifex, Protonaegleria, Pseudomastigamoeba, Plaesiobystra, Rugipes, Striamoeba, Striolatus, Subulamoeba, Theratromyxa, Trienamoeba, Trimastigamoeba, Vampyrellium

While most morphologies can be mapped to modern classification systems, the older grouping "actinopods" is polyphyletic. Actinopods are divided into the radiolaria and heliozoa (itself a polyphyletic grouping).

Pathogenic interactions with other organisms

Some amoeboids can infect other organisms pathogenically (causing disease):

References

  1. ^ "amoeboid". Memidex (WordNet) Dictionary/Thesaurus. http://www.memidex.com/amoeboid. Retrieved 2010-12-02.
  2. ^ Eric Bapteste, Henner Brinkmann, Jennifer A. Lee, Dorothy V. Moore, Christoph W. Sensen, Paul Gordon, Laure Duruflé, Terry Gaasterland, Philippe Lopez, Miklós Müller & Hervé Philippe (2001). "The analysis of 100 genes supports the grouping of three highly divergent amoebae: Dictyostelium, Entamoeba, and Mastigamoeba". Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 99 (3): 1414–1419. doi:10.1073/pnas.032662799. PMID 11830664. PMC 122205. http://www.pnas.org/content/99/3/1414.full.pdf.
  3. ^ "The Amoebae". http://www.bms.ed.ac.uk/research/others/smaciver/amoebae.htm. Retrieved 2009-05-02.
  4. ^ Pawlowski J, Burki F (2009). "Untangling the phylogeny of amoeboid protists". J. Eukaryot. Microbiol. 56 (1): 16–25. doi:10.1111/j.1550-7408.2008.00379.x. PMID 19335771.

External links

· · Microbiology: Protist
Protozoa locomotion Flagellate (Flagellum) · Amoeboid (Pseudopod) · Ciliate (Cilium)
Other structures/organelles
Chromalveolate

Ciliates: Macronucleus · Micronucleus

Apicomplexans: Rhoptry · Apicoplast · Microneme
Excavate Kinetoplastids: Kinetoplast · Glycosome
Multiple groups Hydrogenosome

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· · Eukaryota
Domain : Archaea · Bacteria · Eukaryota
Bikonta
AH/SAR
AH
Archaeplastida, or Plantae sensu lato Viridiplantae/Plantae sensu stricto · Rhodophyta · Glaucocystophyceae
Hacrobia, or non-SAR chromalveolata Haptophyta · Cryptophyta · Centroheliozoa
SAR
Halvaria
Heterokont ("S") Ochrophyta · Bigyra · Pseudofungi
Alveolata Ciliates · Myzozoa (Apicomplexa, Dinoflagellata)
Rhizaria Cercozoa · Retaria (Foraminifera, Radiolaria)
Excavata Discoba (Euglenozoa, Percolozoa) · Metamonad · Malawimonas
Unikonta
Apusozoa Apusomonadida (Apusomonas, Amastigomonas) · Ancyromonadida (Ancyromonas) · Hemimastigida (Hemimastix, Spironema, Stereonema)
Amoebozoa Lobosea · Conosa · Phalansterium · Breviata
Opisthokonta
Holozoa
Mesomycetozoea Dermocystida · Ichthyophonida
Filozoa
Filasterea Capsaspora · Ministeria
Choanoflagellatea Codonosigidae
Metazoa or "Animalia" Eumetazoa (Bilateria, Cnidaria, Ctenophora) · Mesozoa · Parazoa (Placozoa, Porifera)
Holomycota
Fungi Dikarya (Ascomycota, Basidiomycota) · Glomeromycota · Zygomycota · Blastocladiomycota · Chytridiomycota/Neocallimastigomycota · Microsporidia
Nucleariidae Nuclearia · Micronuclearia · Rabdiophrys · Pinaciophora · Pompholyxophrys · Fonticula
· · Amoebozoa
Lobosea
Discosea
Flabellinea
Dactylopodida Paramoebidae (Paramoeba, Korotnevella, Mayorella) · Vexilliferidae (Neoparamoeba, Vexillifera)
Vannellida Vannellidae (Clydonella, Discamoeba, Lingulamoeba, Platyamoeba, Unda, Vannella)
Himatismenida Cochliopodiidae (Cochliopodium)
Thecamoebidae

discosean:Dermamoeba

other: Sappinia, Thecamoeba
Tubulinea
Arcellinida Arcellina (Arcella) · Difflugina (Centropyxis, Heleopera, Apodera, Difflugia)
Euamoebida

Echinamoebidae (Echinamoeba, Filamoeba, Gephyramoeba, Hartmannella vermiformis)

Leptomyxida (Leptomyxa, Rhizamoeba, Flabellula, Paraflabellula)

Copromyxidae (Copromyxa, Copromyxella)

Tubulinida: Amoebidae (Amoeba, Chaos, Hydramoeba, Metachaos, Polychaos, Trichamoeba) · Hartmannellidae (Glaeseria, true Hartmannella, Nolandella, Saccamoeba)
Centramoebida Acanthamoebidae (Acanthamoeba, Comandonia, Protacanthamoeba) · Balamuthiidae (Balamuthia)
Conosa
Archamoebae

Mastigamoebida: Mastigamoeba · Mastigella · Phreatamoeba · non-ciliate (Endolimax, Endamoeba)

Pelobiontida: Pelomyxidae (Pelomyxa) · Entamoebidae/non-cilitate (Entamoeba) · Mastigina
Mycetozoa
Macromycetozoa

Dictyostelid: Dictyostelium · Polysphondylium · Acytostelium

Myxogastria: Liceida (Cribraria, Lycogala, Tubifera) · Myxogastromycetidae (Echinostelium, Fuligo, Lepidoderma, Physarum) · Stemonitida (Comatricha, Stemonitis) · Trichiida (Arcyria, Trichia)

other: Ceratiomyxa
Protosteliales Planoprotostelium · Protostelium
Other Phalansterium · Multicilia
Breviatea Breviata
Other/ungrouped Stereomyxa · Trichosphaerium

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· · Rhizaria
Cercozoa
Filosa
Monadofilosa
Imbricatea Euglyphida: Cyphoderiidae · Euglyphidae · Paulinellidae · Trinematidae · Thaumatomonadida: Thaumatomastigidae
Thecofilosea Cryomonad · Ebriidae · Phaeodarea · Tectofilosid · Cryptodifflugia
Spongomonadea Spongomonas, Rhipidodendron
Cercomonadida Cercomonadidae · Heteromitidae · Sainouridae
Reticulofilosa
Proteomyxidea Gymnophryidae · Dimorphidae · Desmothoracida · Gymnosphaerida
Chlorarachniophyta Chlorarachnion, Gymnochlora, Lotharella, Cryptochlora, Bigelowiella
Endomyxa Phytomyxea, Vampyrellidae, Pseudospora, Ascetosporea: Paramyxea · Haplosporidia, Gromiidae, Reticulosida
Retaria
Foraminifera Allogromiida · Miliolid · Textulariida
Radiolaria Polycystinea · Acantharea · Sticholonchea
· · Excavata
Discoba
Discicristata
Euglenozoa Euglenida (Euglena) · Kinetoplastida/Trypanosomatida (Trypanosoma, Leishmania)
Percolozoa
Heterolobosea

Schizopyrenida: Vahlkampfiidae (Naegleria, Neovahlkampfia, Paravahlkampfia, Psalteriomonas, Sawyeria, Tetramitus/Paratetramitus, Vahlkampfia, Willaertia) · Gruberellidae (Stachyamoeba) · Rosculus

Acrasidae (Acrasis)

Heteramoeba · Learamoeba · Macropharyngomonas · Monopylocystis · Stygamoeba
Percolatea Percolomonas · Stephanopogon
Loukozoa/Jakobea
Andaluciida Andalucia
Jakobida Jakobidae (Jakoba) · Histionidae (Reclinomonas, Histiona)
M+M
Metamonad
Trichozoa
Parabasalidea Trichomonadida (Trichomonas, Dientamoeba, Mixotricha, Histomonas) · Hypermastigia (Trichonympha)
Fornicata
Eopharingia

Diplomonadida: Hexamitinae (Spironucleus, Hexamita) · Giardiinae (Giardia, Octomitus)

Retortamonadida (Chilomastix, Retortamonas)
Other Carpediemonadida (Carpediemonas) · Dysnectes
Anaeromonadea Trimastix · Oxymonadida (Dinenympha, Pyrsonympha, Oxymonas)
Other Malawimonas

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Categories: Protista | Cell biology | Amoeboids | Motile cells

 

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