Repository logo
Research Data
Publications
Projects
Persons
Organizations
English
Français
Log In(current)
  1. Home
  2. Publications
  3. Article de recherche (journal article)
  4. Mycamoeba gemmipara nov. gen., nov. sp., the First Cultured Member of the Environmental Dermamoebidae Clade LKM74 and its Unusual Life Cycle

<i>Mycamoeba gemmipara</i> nov. gen., nov. sp., the First Cultured Member of the Environmental Dermamoebidae Clade LKM74 and its Unusual Life Cycle

Author(s)
Blandenier, Quentin  
Laboratoire de biodiversité du sol  
Seppey, Christophe V. W
Singer, David  
Laboratoire de biodiversité du sol  
Vlimant, Michèle  
Laboratoire d'écologie et évolution des parasites  
Simon, Anaële
Duckert, Clément
Lara, Enrique  
Laboratoire de biodiversité du sol  
Date issued
2017
In
Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology, Wiley
Vol
64
No
2
From page
257
To page
265
Subjects
Budding Discosea eukaryotic diversity fungus high throughput sequencing Longamoebia ribosomal genes serial dilution yeast.
Abstract
Since the first environmental DNA surveys, entire groups of sequences called “environmental clades” did not have any cultured representative. LKM74 is an amoebozoan clade affiliated to Dermamoebidae, whose presence is pervasively reported in soil and freshwater. We obtained an isolate from soil that we assigned to LKM74 by molecular phylogeny, close related to freshwater clones. We described <i>Mycamoeba gemmipara</i> based on observations made with light- and transmission electron microscopy. It is an extremely small amoeba with typical lingulate shape. Unlike other Dermamoebidae, it lacked ornamentation on its cell membrane, and condensed chromatin formed characteristic patterns in the nucleus. <i>M. gemmipara</i> displayed a unique life cycle: trophozoites formed walled coccoid stages which grew through successive buddings and developed into branched structures holding cysts. These structures, measuring hundreds of micrometres, are built as the exclusive product of osmotrophic feeding. To demonstrate that <i>M. gemmipara</i> is a genuine soil inhabitant, we screened its presence in an environmental soil DNA diversity survey performed on an experimental setup where pig cadavers were left to decompose in soils to follow changes in eukaryotic communities. <i>Mycamoeba gemmipara</i> was present in all samples, although related reads were uncommon underneath the cadaver.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/65317
DOI
10.1111/jeu.12357
File(s)
Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Download
Name

Blandenier_Q.-Mycamoeba-20170419.pdf

Type

Main Article

Size

1.14 MB

Format

Adobe PDF

Université de Neuchâtel logo

Service information scientifique & bibliothèques

Rue Emile-Argand 11

2000 Neuchâtel

contact.libra@unine.ch

Service informatique et télématique

Rue Emile-Argand 11

Bâtiment B, rez-de-chaussée

Powered by DSpace-CRIS

libra v2.2.0

© 2026 Université de Neuchâtel

Portal overviewUser guideOpen Access strategyOpen Access directive Research at UniNE Open Access ORCIDWhat's new