Abstract

Aphelids (Aphelida) are intracellular parasitoids of algae and represent one of the early diverging or sister lineages of the kingdom Fungi. Although Aphelida is a small group, molecular phylogenetic analyses revealed that many environmental sequences belong to Aphelida, suggesting that aphelids are distributed worldwide; however, the extent of their diversity is unclear. Here, we investigated a novel aphelid culture APH2 that parasitizes the green alga Coccomyxa sp. APH2 produced posteriorly uniflagellate zoospores, a defining character of the genus Aphelidium. The residual body of APH2 was spherical in the mature plasmodium, but became amorphous during zoospore formation and collapsed after zoospore discharge, which has not been described for other Aphelidium species. Zoospores of APH2 possessed a striated rhizoplast that extended anteriorly from the kinetosome to the posterior end of the nucleus, and a microtubular root arising from the side of the kinetosome and lying almost parallel to the rhizoplast, both of which are unique among aphelid taxa. A molecular phylogenetic analysis based on the 18S rDNA sequences placed APH2 as sister lineage to all other known aphelid sequences. Based on these results, we describe this aphelid as a new species, Aphelidium collabens.

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