About: Metamonad is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 2 publications have been published within this topic receiving 45 citations. The topic is also known as: Metamonada.
TL;DR: Hicanonectes teleskopos has a ventral groove and two unequal flagella, and rapidly rotates during swimming, and forms a clade with the deep‐branching fornicate Carpediemonas, with moderate‐to‐strong bootstrap support, although their SSU rRNA gene sequences are quite dissimilar.
Abstract: . We describe Hicanonectes teleskopos n. g., n. sp., a heterotrophic flagellate isolated from low-oxygen marine sediment. Hicanonectes teleskopos has a ventral groove and two unequal flagella, and rapidly rotates during swimming. At the ultrastructural level H. teleskopos is a “typical excavate”: it displays flagellar vanes, a split right microtubular root, “I,”“B,” and “C” fibres, a singlet microtubular root, and a possible composite fibre. Small subunit rRNA (SSU rRNA) gene phylogenies and an “arched” B fibre demonstrate that H. teleskopos belongs to Fornicata (i.e. diplomonads, retortamonads, and relatives). It forms a clade with the deep-branching fornicate Carpediemonas, with moderate-to-strong bootstrap support, although their SSU rRNA gene sequences are quite dissimilar. Hicanonectes differs from Carpediemonas in cell shape, swimming behaviour, number of basal bodies (i.e. 4 vs. 3), number of flagellar vanes (i.e. 2 vs. 3), anterior root organization, and by having a cytopharynx. Like Carpediemonas and Dysnectes, Hicanonectes has conspicuous mitochondrion-like organelles that lack cristae and superficially resemble the hydrogenosomes of parabasalids, rather than the mitosomes of their closer relatives the diplomonads (e.g. Giardia).
TL;DR: A biochemical study of the cytoskeletal structures such as costa, parabasal fibre, preaxostylar fibre and undulating membrane in trichomonads reveals a large diversity in the protein composition among the genera that fits with the large distance between the taxa estimated by rDNA sequencing.
Abstract: The amitochondrial flagellates comprise the Archamoebae, the Metamonada (orders: Retortamonadida, Diplomonadida, Oxymonadida) and the Parabasala. Molecular rDNA sequence comparison has shown that the diplomonads are very ancient and placed at the base of the tree, but the position of the parabasalids before or after the Euglenozoa and other mitochondriate protists is not definitively determined and such molecular data are required to place the other groups. Common cytological features such as one basal body and a basal body-nucleus connector show that the mastigamoebids or Archamoebae are an evolutionary lineage. The metamonad grouping is heterogenous; the three orders have in common two pairs ofbasal bodies, no Golgi and could be poly- or paraphyletic