Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni n. sp. (Myxosporea: Bivalvulida) from gall bladders of the Cape hakes Merluccius capensis Castelnau, and M. paradoxus Franca (Teleostei: Merlucciidae)
Author
Reed, Cecile
Author
Kalavati, Chaganti
Author
Mackenzie, Ken
Author
Collins, Catherine
Author
Hemmingsen, Willy
text
Zootaxa
2018
2018-10-10
4497
3
422
428
journal article
29167
10.11646/zootaxa.4497.3.6
a0b75f9b-f339-4eb7-9597-fd287a1c2879
1175-5326
1455223
551E90C6-B550-4187-8E04-B43746BD40DA
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
n. sp.
Material studied.
Type
host:
Merluccius capensis
Castelnau, 1861
Other hosts:
Merluccius paradoxus
Franca
, 1960
Site of infection:
gall bladder
Localities and dates
(where known): (1) Southern
Benguela
off West Coast of
South Africa
; (2) Southern
Benguela
south of
South Africa
, 36°62´S, 20°63´E,
16/04/2016
.
Type
locality:
Southern
Benguela
, West Coast of
South Africa
.
Prevalence:
(
1) 100% (4 of
4
M.
capensis, 8 of
8
M.
paradoxus); (2) 61.5% (16 of
26
M.
capensis).
Host length range:
270–743 mm
Accession number:
SAMC-A
089049
Etymology: t
he new parasite is named for Dr Carl van der Lingen, who provided the fish hosts in which it was found.
Morphological description.
Sporoblast amoeboid, disporous and staining uniformly (
Fig. 1
). Dimensions, based on 10 fixed specimens: 58.4–68.4 x 45.0–50.0. No vegetative stages from fresh material were available for measurements.
Spore (
Figs. 2-6
) oval with rounded ends in side view, flat anteriorly and curved in apical view. Sutural line prominent and slightly bent. Sporoplasm deeply staining and binucleate. Valves drawn out into two delicate, broad, relatively small alate processes joined together at their proximal extremities. Polar capsules oval, widely separated. Polar filament with 5 to 6 coils. Dimensions, based on 17 fresh spores, as ranges with means ± SD in parentheses: spore length 12.2–15.3 (14.2 ± 1.0); spore width, excluding alate processes 18.2–23.4 (20.6 ± 1.8); polar capsule oval, length 4.4–5.5 (5.0 ± 0.3); width 4.2 –5.1 (4.8 ± 0.3); polar capsule length: spore length = 1: 2.3–2.9; spore length: spore width = 1: 1.2–1.7.
Further spore measurements were taken from formalin-fixed and frozen spores and found to be 30-70% greater than those given above for fresh spores.
Molecular Results.
A product of approximately 1500 nucleotides was generated by PCR amplification from purified DNA from the gall bladder of a single specimen of
M. capensis
. Direct sequencing of 4 pools of purified PCR products (four PCR reactions per pool) gave identical sequences. Once primers and poor sequence at the 5’- and 3’ termini were removed, a sequence of 1447 nucleotides remained and was submitted to Genbank under Accession No.
MF034897
.
Searches of the GenBank public sequence database found that the sequence was novel and represented a new myxozospoean species. Closest sequence identity was found with
Ceratomyxa cretensis
(
JX869942
),
Ceratomyxa filamentosi
(
JX869943
/
JX869944
) and
Ceratomyxa arcuata
(
KJ419344
), with an identity of 91% shared with all three species, over 99%, 98/96% and 93% respectively of the myxozoasporean sp. 18S rDNA sequence. Following alignment with other myxosporean species and removal of gaps and ambiguous nucleotides, a sequence of 1021 remained for phylogenetic analyses. ML and MP trees showed similar topologies, with the newly described myxosporean sp. from
M. capensis
being a sister group to a group containing
C. arcuata
,
C. cretensis
and
C. filamentosi
, with bootstrap support of 100/99 respectively (
Fig. 7
).
Discussion.
Myxosporeans have been reported on three previous occasions from the gall bladders of
Cape
hake.
Fantham (1930)
gave a brief description, without a figure, of
Sphaerospora subelegans
n. sp.
from a single specimen of
M. capensis
caught in Table Bay. Fantham’s description suggests that it may well have been the same species as that described in this paper, but it is not possible to confirm this from Fantham’s description and we were unable to locate his original material for comparison.
Aleshkina (1982)
reported
Ceratomyxa
sp. and
Leptotheca
sp. from
M. capensis
caught off
Namibia
, while
Reimer (1993)
reported
Leptotheca
sp. from both
M. capensis
and
M. paradoxus
caught off
Namibia
. Neither
Aleshkina (1982)
or
Reimer (1993)
provided descriptions of the spores, although Reimer did provide some measurements, and the genus
Pseudalataspora
had not been described at the time of Aleshkina’s paper. The genus
Leptotheca
is no longer recognized and its former species have been reassigned to other genera, including
Ceratomyxa
and
Sphaerospora
(see
Gunter and Adlard, 2010
). Both authors reported very high prevalences similar to those found in the present study. It seems very likely that the species they reported was
P. vanderlingeni
.
Sixteen species of the genus
Pseudalataspora
have been described from the gall bladders of marine fishes (Table 1). Apart from
P. vanderlingeni
,
the only one to have been characterised molecularly to date is
P. kovalevae
,
which is also the only other species described from a member of the teleost family
Merlucciidae
(see
Kalavati
et al.,
2013
).
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
is the first to be described from a member of the genus
Merluccius
.
Fig. 7
shows that the genetic sequences of these two species are more similar to species of
Ceratomyxa
than they are to one another.
FIGURE 1–5. FIGURE 1.
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
:
unstained disporic sporoblast.
FIGURE 2.
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
:
unstained spore in anterior/sutural view.
FIGURE 3 & 4.
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
:
unstained spores in valvular view.
FIGURE 5.
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
:
spore stained with Giemsa in valvular view.
Scale bar
= 10 µm.
We found that spore measurements taken from formalin-fixed and frozen spores were both significantly greater than those taken from fresh spores. Further evidence of the effects of freezing and fixation on spore dimensions can be found in
Sarkar (2012)
. In his description of
Pseudalataspora misrae,
Sarkar
reported marked differences between two sets of measurements – one from frozen unfixed spores and the other from fixed and stained spores, measurements from the frozen spores being 11-16% greater than those from the fixed and stained spores. The spores of members of the genus
Pseudalataspora
thus appear to be very susceptible to swelling and distortion when they are frozen and/or fixed. This makes comparisons of spore dimensions between species of
Pseudalataspora
of doubtful value for taxonomic purposes unless comparisons are based on fresh spores only. Those of
P. vanderlingeni
appear to be closest in size to
P. beryxi
Kovaleva & Gaevskaya, 1988
, described from the gall bladder of
Beryx splendens
caught in the Atlantic Ocean. In other respects, however, such as the spore shape and the dimensions of the polar capsules, the two species are quite different.
The difficulty of observing the fragile alate processes characteristic of species of
Pseudalatospora
and the close phylogenetic relationship between members of the genera
Pseudalataspora
and
Ceratomyxa
,
based on rDNA sequences, prompted
Kalavati
et al.
(2013)
to suggest that some species of
Pseudalataspora
may previously have been assigned wrongly to the genus
Ceratomyxa
.
Rocha
et al
. (2015)
further suggested that sequencing of more species of
Pseudalataspora
and
Alataspora
would probably lead to the demise of the family
Alatasporidae
and the assignment of its species to the genus
Ceratomyxa
.
While we agree about the possible demise of the family
Alatasporidae
, we feel that the clear and unambiguous morphological differences between
Ceratomyxa
,
Alataspora
and
Pseudalataspora
are currently sufficient to justify their status as separate genera, at least until genetic sequences are available for more species of the latter two genera.
FIGURE 6.
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
:
fresh spore under phase contrast.
Scale bar =
10 µm.
FIGURE 7.
Maximum Likelihood consensus tree showing relationship of
Pseudalataspora vanderlingeni
(in bold), isolated from
Merluccius capensis
,
to other
Ceratomyza
species, based on 18S rDNA sequence analysis. Bootstrap values indicating ≥ than 70% support for Maximum Likelihood and Maximum Parsimony analyses respectively are shown. Host species, geographical origin and accession numbers are listed after species names. 1myxosporean species also isolated from
Archamia fucata
; 2 also isolated from
Cheilodipterus quinquelineatus
/
Nectamia fusca
/
Ostorhinchus cookii
/
Apogon doederleini
/; 3also isolated from
Plectroglyphidodon leucozonus
/
Chrysiptera cyanea
/
Pomacentrus chrysurus
/
Neoglyphidodon melas
; 4 also isolated from
Clupea harengus
; 5also isolated from
Aulopus filamentosus
; 6also isolated from
Aulopus filamentosus
; 7also isolated from
Aulopus filamentosus
; 8myxosporean species isolated from monogenean
Diplectanocotyla
sp. on the gills of
Megalops cyprinoides
; 9also isolated from
Belone belone
.
Finally, a plea to authors of research papers and textbooks to use the correct spelling of
Alatasporidae
,
Alataspora
and
Pseudalataspora
, which are frequently misspelt as
Alatosporidae
,
Alatospora
and
Pseudalatospora
(or
Pseudoalatospora
) respectively. The name
Alatospora
is preoccupied by a genus of fungus.