What Are the Protists?

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Protists 1

What Are the Protists? 2 Protists are all the eukaryotes that are not fungi, plants, or animals. Protists are a paraphyletic group. Protists exhibit wide variation in morphology, size, and nutritional strategies. All protists live in water, or moist soil, or moist interiors of other organisms.

3 Recent phylogeny of eukaryotes The tree of life groups protists based on molecular data. The molecular data for protists supports much of the historical groupings of protists based on their morphology.

What Are the Protists? 4 Timeline of early eukaryotic evolution Eukaryotes appear to have evolved close to, or soon after, the time that O 2 became abundant in the atmosphere and oceans.

--600-- --700-- First brown algae; Diverse multicellular red algae First green algae 5 First dinoflagellates? First amoebae with tests First stramenopiles (xanthophyte algae) Grypania from India, China, North America First rocks that formed in an atmosphere and ocean containing oxygen Millions of years ago --800-- --900-- --1000-- --1100-- --1200-- --1300-- --1400-- --1500-- --1600-- --1700-- --1800-- --1900-- --2000-- --2100-- --2200-- --3465-- 93.5 µm First uncontroversial Eukaryote fossils 14.4 mm First red algae (filamentous forms) 69.9 µm 26.7 µm Leiosphaerid acritarch from northern Australia Earliest fossils (bacteria) First colonial eukaryotes Start of rapid diversification of algae; First evidence of sexual structures Grypania spiralis from Michigan (controversial)

Organization 6 The earliest eukaryotes solved the problem of increasing cell size (10 times larger than avg. prokaryote). As cell increases volume increases more rapidly than surface area; hence there is a lack of synchronicity between metabolism and transport and exchange of energy and nutrients. In order to cope with this: Compartmentalization into organelles increased the available surface area in the interior of cells, facilitating food and waste transport in and out of the cell. Larger cells make possible the evolution of diverse structures and functions. Unicellular, colonies, multicellular.

7 Cilia Gullet Cell mouth Food vacuoles Nucleus Anal pore

Volvocales species range from unicellular to colonial to multicellular. 8 Gonium Chlamydomonas Pandorina Volvox

Some protists are clearly multicellular. 9

Homeostasis 10 Methods of locomotion, support, and protection Protists can be motile by means of cilia or flagella. Support and protection are provided by hard external tests or shells, or by rigid internal structures.

Pseudopodia 11

Flagella 12

Cilia 13

14 Structure of microtubules in cilia and flagella 2 single microtubules 9 paired microtubules

Foraminifera 15 143 µm Calcium carbonate test, with chambers

Diatom 16 21 µm Test made of silicon oxides

Dinoflagellate 17 399 nm Plates made of cellulose

Reproduction and Heredity 18 Meiosis makes eukaryotic sexual reproduction possible. Meiosis reduces the diploid chromosome number to haploid and introduces genetic variability through crossover and independent assortment. Asexual reproduction is also observed Advantages of meiosis/sexual reproduction

Growth and Development 19 Diversity in the timing of meiosis and sexual reproduction has led to a wide variety of life cycles in the protists. Growth of cells and development of multicellular entities is observed for the first time in evolutionary history

21 Chlamydomonas (n) (n) Gametes (n) ASEXUAL REPRODUCTION (n) Mature cell (n) (n) SEXUAL REPRODUCTION (2n) SYNGAMY MEIOSIS Zygote Haploid Diploid

22 Ulva (a green alga) (n) Haploid Diploid (2n) MEIOSIS (n) SEXUAL REPRODUCTION (2n) Gametes (n) Zygote SYNGAMY

23 Laminaria (a brown alga) Haploid Diploid (2n) MEIOSIS (n) SEXUAL REPRODUCTION (n) (2n) Zygote Egg FERTILIZATION Sperm

Metabolism 24 Protists are either chemoheterotrophs (most of them) or photoautotrophs Chemoheterotrophs developed novel nutritional strategies facilitated by innovations in cell structure. Ingestive heterotrophs engulf bacteria and other food materials in pseudopods. Hence predation evolved. Scavenging is facilitated by ciliated structures Also absorptive lifestyles occur: decomposers and parasites Nutritional strategies may vary widely within any one phylogenetic group.

25 Predation and scavenging Pseudopodia engulf food

Ciliary currents sweep food into a gullet 26

Parasitism 27 Host Parasite

Ecology 28 Predation: Paramecium Parasitism: Plasmodium falciparum Mutualism: most marine ciliates contain dinoflagellates that engage in photosynthesis Decomposers: water molds (oomycetes) Competition in photosynthetic autotrophs: variation in their photosynthetic pigments, which enables different species to utilize different wavelengths of light and reduce competition.

29 Photosynthetic pigments Red: chlorophyll a and phycobilins Brown: chlorophyll a and chlorophyll c Green: chlorophyll a and chlorophyll b

Symbiosis 30 Host Symbionts

Ecology 31 All protists live in water, or moist soil, or moist interiors of other organisms. Species diversity is low (only 10 percent of all known eukaryotes); however abundance is extremely high (a single teaspoon of pondwater can contain over 1000 flagellated protists)

Surface waters teem with microscopic protists 32 In some near-shore areas, gigantic protists form underwater forests Protists are particularly abundant in tidal habitats

Adaptation 33 Meiosis, sexual reproduction, and the diversity of eukaryotes. The effect of potentially debilitating mutations is lessened since only half of the daughter cells of meiosis will receive a particular mutant allele. Fusion of haploid gametes from two parents creates genetically different offspring, some of which may be more resistant to environmental changes and pathogens than the parents.

34 The Origin of Mitochondria and Chloroplasts The endosymbiotic theory Mitochondria evolved by larger anaerobic eukaryotes engulfing aerobic prokaryotes, which became endosymbionts that enabled the host cell to become aerobic. Chloroplasts evolved in an analogous way. In this case a photosynthetic, endosymbiotic bacteria provided its eukaryotic host with oxygen and glucose in exchange of protection.

THE ENDOSYMBIOTIC THEORY Reduced carbon compounds Reduced carbon compounds Electron transport High ATP + O 2 chain yield Fermentation Low ATP yield 35 Aerobic bacterium Anaerobic eukaryote 1. Eukaryotic cell surrounds and engulfs bacterium. 2. Bacterium lives within eukaryote cell. Pyruvate and O 2 ATP 3. Eukaryote supplies bacterium with reduced carbon compounds. bacterium supplies eukaryote with ATP.

36 The Origin of Mitochondria and Chloroplasts The endosymbiotic theory Evidence that supports the theory of endosymbiosis: Physical similarities exist between mitochondria, chloroplasts, and prokaryotes. Molecular data indicates mitochondria and chloroplasts are prokaryotic in origin.

Importance 37 Many protists are responsible for human diseases, such as malaria (Plasmodium falciparum), diarrhea (Giardia), reproductive tract infections (Trichomonas), chagas disease (Tripanosoma cruzi). Protists are the leading primary producers in oceans and are the basis for marine and freshwater food chains.

38 CO 2 Phytoplankton Grazing plankton Dissolved C Bacteria Sinking Sinking CaCO 3 shells accumulate on the bottom

39 Grazing protists Photosynthetic protists