Nodosilinea chupicuarensis Vázquez-Martínez, Gutierrez-Villagomez and Molina-Torres, 2018
publication ID |
https://doi.org/ 10.11646/phytotaxa.334.2.6 |
DOI |
https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.13721552 |
persistent identifier |
https://treatment.plazi.org/id/482F87BB-CA45-B46F-20E1-1EE64AE3FB5D |
treatment provided by |
Felipe |
scientific name |
Nodosilinea chupicuarensis Vázquez-Martínez, Gutierrez-Villagomez and Molina-Torres |
status |
sp. nov. |
Nodosilinea chupicuarensis Vázquez-Martínez, Gutierrez-Villagomez and Molina-Torres sp. nov. ( Fig. 2 View FIGURE 2 and 3 View FIGURE 3 )
Diagnosis: —Differing from all other described Nodosilinea species through possession of regularly spiralled filaments in the population.
Description: —Thallus creeping on the rock surface forming a blue-green patina, embedded in mucilage. Filaments long (up to more than 350 cells long), under high light straight or gently curved, uniseriate, without false branching, 1.1–1.3 μm wide, under low light intensity (<4 μmol photons m 2 s-1) appearing curved and forming spirals, in some instances filaments multiseriate, occasionally forming tight, compact nodules. Sheaths clear, thin, occasionally extending beyond trichome ends. Trichomes slightly motile, particularly at the 10–20 cells at the tips, constricted at the cross-walls, 0.9–1.2 μm wide. Cells lacking aerotopes, barrel-shaped (0.9 μm wide x 1.2 μm long), occasionally discshaped (1.2 μm wide x 0.6 μm long) or isodiametric (0.9–1.2 μm in diameter), with clear centroplasm and chromoplasm often visible in LM (=peripheral thylakoids). Apical cells dome-shaped, non-capitate, sometimes elongated, without calyptra. Reproducing by motile hormogonia.
Etymology: — Nodosilinea chupicuarensis , Nodosilinea = “Knotted line” Perkerson et al. (2011); chupicuarensis (chu.pi.cua.re´n.sis) N.L. fem. adj. chupicuarensis = origin from Chupícuaro, the ancient name of the region where the type strain was isolated (from Purépecha “ chupicua ” the name of a plant of the Impomea genus used to obtain a blue stain combined with “ ro ” meaning “place”; consequently chupicuaro = “blue place”).
Habitat: —Stone surface, epilithic.
Type Locality:— MEXICO. Guanajuato: San Miguel de Allende, archaeological zone of Cañada de la Virgen, Complex A, 20°51’29.6” N, 100°55’41.0” W, J. Vázquez-Martínez, J.M. Gutierrez-Villagomez, J. Molina-Torres, 12- 10-2012.
Holotype here designated: — MEXU 4813 About MEXU ! in the Herbario Nacional at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México at Mexico City, Mexico.
Isotypes here designated: — MEXU 4814!, MEXU 4815! in the Herbario Nacional at the Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México at Mexico City, Mexico.
Observations: —Under low light intensity conditions (3–4 weeks of culture), filaments are curved to form spirals that can be very compact or very relaxed. In some instances, trichomes become multiseriate due to cells inside the filament dividing in multiple planes. In some cases, these multiseriate regions resemble nodules. Within these multiseriate regions, nodules occasionally occur with the characteristic morphology of nodules found in other Nodosilinea species. This strain presents a distinctive spirally coiled morphology under the same low light intensity conditions that produce nodules in other species, with only rare nodule formation.
The thallus is formed by a cluster of filaments that becomes a firm mat. In some instances, the filaments are embedded in an extracellular polymeric matrix, and these polymers can be visualised by alcian blue staining (data not shown). The thallus grows as a cluster of tangled filaments that are inlaid in the rock porosities forming a green-blue patina. Something similar occurs in vitro when the strain grows in solid BG-11 medium. Trichomes grow as spherical compact aggregates (1–4 mm diameter) when the strain is cultivated in liquid BG-11 medium under constant agitation. Hormogonia are formed by direct trichome fragmentation without formation of necridia.
Phylogenetic analysis: —According to the phylogenetic analysis using 16S rRNA gene sequences, Nodosilinea chupicuarensis is most related to Nodosilinea nodulosa UTEX 2910 , with 99.5–99.4% identity. In the 16S rRNA phylogenetic tree ( Fig. 4 View FIGURE 4 ), N. chupicuarensis is the sister taxon to N. nodulosa UTEX 2910 and these two species are grouped together in a weakly supported clade in all three analyses performed (posterior probabilities/bootstrap support = 0.68, 76, 70). However, based on the analysis of the 16S-23S ITS region, N. chupicuarensis was distant from Nodosilinea nodulosa UTEX 2910 (p-distance = 0.0822), being closest to a soil strain from China, Nodosilinea sp. CXA007.4 (p-distance = 0.0665) (see Table 1). Members of the same bacterial species have been found to have p-distance <0.03, and the average intraspecies p-distance is ~0.01 ( Erwin & Thacker 2008, Osorio-Santos et al. 2014, Pietrasiak et al. 2014), strongly suggesting that N. chupicuarensis is distinct from all other sequenced species (described or undescribed) of Nodosilinea . The 16S-23S ITS phylogenetic tree ( Fig. 5 View FIGURE 5 ) shows N. chupicuarensis to be phylogenetically separated from the other Nodosilinea strains, which fall into one of two supported clades.
ITS secondary structure: —Comparison of secondary structure of 16S-23S conserved domains provides additional confirmation of the phylogenetic similarity among all Nodosilinea species presented in this study. While the secondary structure among the D1–D1’ helices is identical for six of the strains including N. chupicuarensis ( Fig. 6 A–F View FIGURE 6 ), every helix differs in sequence ( Fig. 6 A–H View FIGURE 6 ). The Box-B helices were more variable in length, sequence, and structure ( Fig. 6 I–P View FIGURE 6 ), and could be considered evidence that all eight strains in the comparison set were likely different species. Unlike most other cyanobacterial genera, the V 3 helices were unusually conserved. All 19 strains for which complete ITS regions were obtained had V 3 helices identical in sequence and structure ( Fig. 6 Q View FIGURE 6 ).
MEXU |
Universidad Nacional Autónoma de México |
V |
Royal British Columbia Museum - Herbarium |
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