Mycologia
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DOI: 10.3852/mycologia.99.2.215
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Mycologia, 99(2), 2007, pp. 215-221.
© 2007 by The Mycological Society of America

Molecular identification and classification of Cochlonema euryblastum, a zoopagalean parasite of Thecamoeba quadrilineata


Martina Koehsler
Julia Walochnik 1

     Department of Medical Parasitology, Clinical Institute of Hygiene and Medical Microbiology, Medical University of Vienna, Kinderspitalgasse 15, 1095 Vienna, Austria

Rolf Michel
Johannes Lugauer

     Central Institute of the Federal Armed Forces Medical Services, Department of Parasitology, Andernacher Straße 100, 56070 Koblenz, Germany

Claudia Wylezich

     Department of Ecology and Limnology, Institute of Zoology, University of Cologne, Weyertal 119, 50923 Cologne, Germany

Free-living amoebae can serve a great variety of organisms, predominantly bacteria but to a certain extent also fungi, as a suitable host supplying them with nutrients and protecting them from adverse environmental conditions. In the current study 18S rDNA sequencing was performed to identify a fungal parasite in a Thecamoeba quadrilineata isolate. This parasite morphologically resembled Cochlonema euryblastum, a member of the order Zoopagales, which comprises parasitic species on fungi and invertebrates. Sequence analysis corroborated the morphological identification and the fungal parasite clearly can be assigned to the Zoopagales. Phylogenetic analysis revealed C. euryblastum clustering with two representatives of the mycoparasitic family Piptocephalidaceae. This zooparasitic-mycoparasitic clade represents a sister group of a clade including another member of the Piptocephalidaceae and two other zooparasitic families. Thus, the addition of C. euryblastum to the zoopagalean tree further confirms the finding that molecular data do not support the traditional classification of the Zoopageles.

Key words: 18S rDNA, endocytobiont, free-living amoeba, parasite, Zoopagales, Zygomycota


1 Corresponding author. E-mail: Julia.walochnic{at}meduniwien.ac.at







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Copyright © 2007 by The Mycological Society of America.