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Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective

Bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae have always been largely studied not only for their importance in the medical field, but also as model systems in evolutionary biology. In fact, they share a recent common ancestor with mitochondria. The most studied species, belonging to genera Rickettsia and O...

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Autores principales: Vannini, Claudia, Boscaro, Vittorio, Ferrantini, Filippo, Benken, Konstantin A., Mironov, Timofei I., Schweikert, Michael, Görtz, Hans-Dieter, Fokin, Sergei I., Sabaneyeva, Elena V., Petroni, Giulio
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2014
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3914857/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24505307
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087718
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author Vannini, Claudia
Boscaro, Vittorio
Ferrantini, Filippo
Benken, Konstantin A.
Mironov, Timofei I.
Schweikert, Michael
Görtz, Hans-Dieter
Fokin, Sergei I.
Sabaneyeva, Elena V.
Petroni, Giulio
author_facet Vannini, Claudia
Boscaro, Vittorio
Ferrantini, Filippo
Benken, Konstantin A.
Mironov, Timofei I.
Schweikert, Michael
Görtz, Hans-Dieter
Fokin, Sergei I.
Sabaneyeva, Elena V.
Petroni, Giulio
author_sort Vannini, Claudia
collection PubMed
description Bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae have always been largely studied not only for their importance in the medical field, but also as model systems in evolutionary biology. In fact, they share a recent common ancestor with mitochondria. The most studied species, belonging to genera Rickettsia and Orientia, are hosted by terrestrial arthropods and include many human pathogens. Nevertheless, recent findings show that a large part of Rickettsiaceae biodiversity actually resides outside the group of well-known pathogenic bacteria. Collecting data on these recently described non-conventional members of the family is crucial in order to gain information on ancestral features of the whole group. Although bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae, and of the whole order Rickettsiales, are formally described as non-flagellated prokaryotes, some recent findings renewed the debate about this feature. In this paper we report the first finding of members of the family displaying numerous flagella and active movement inside their host cells. These two new taxa are hosted in aquatic environments by protist ciliates and are described here by means of ultrastructural and molecular characterization. Data here reported suggest that the ancestor of Rickettsiales displayed flagellar movement and re-evaluate the hypothesis that motility played a key-role in the origin of mitochondria. Moreover, our study highlights that the aquatic environment represents a well exploited habitat for bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae. Our results encourage a deep re-consideration of ecological and morphological traits of the family and of the whole order.
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spelling pubmed-39148572014-02-06 Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective Vannini, Claudia Boscaro, Vittorio Ferrantini, Filippo Benken, Konstantin A. Mironov, Timofei I. Schweikert, Michael Görtz, Hans-Dieter Fokin, Sergei I. Sabaneyeva, Elena V. Petroni, Giulio PLoS One Research Article Bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae have always been largely studied not only for their importance in the medical field, but also as model systems in evolutionary biology. In fact, they share a recent common ancestor with mitochondria. The most studied species, belonging to genera Rickettsia and Orientia, are hosted by terrestrial arthropods and include many human pathogens. Nevertheless, recent findings show that a large part of Rickettsiaceae biodiversity actually resides outside the group of well-known pathogenic bacteria. Collecting data on these recently described non-conventional members of the family is crucial in order to gain information on ancestral features of the whole group. Although bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae, and of the whole order Rickettsiales, are formally described as non-flagellated prokaryotes, some recent findings renewed the debate about this feature. In this paper we report the first finding of members of the family displaying numerous flagella and active movement inside their host cells. These two new taxa are hosted in aquatic environments by protist ciliates and are described here by means of ultrastructural and molecular characterization. Data here reported suggest that the ancestor of Rickettsiales displayed flagellar movement and re-evaluate the hypothesis that motility played a key-role in the origin of mitochondria. Moreover, our study highlights that the aquatic environment represents a well exploited habitat for bacteria of the family Rickettsiaceae. Our results encourage a deep re-consideration of ecological and morphological traits of the family and of the whole order. Public Library of Science 2014-02-05 /pmc/articles/PMC3914857/ /pubmed/24505307 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087718 Text en © 2014 Vannini et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License, which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are properly credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Vannini, Claudia
Boscaro, Vittorio
Ferrantini, Filippo
Benken, Konstantin A.
Mironov, Timofei I.
Schweikert, Michael
Görtz, Hans-Dieter
Fokin, Sergei I.
Sabaneyeva, Elena V.
Petroni, Giulio
Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective
title Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective
title_full Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective
title_fullStr Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective
title_full_unstemmed Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective
title_short Flagellar Movement in Two Bacteria of the Family Rickettsiaceae: A Re-Evaluation of Motility in an Evolutionary Perspective
title_sort flagellar movement in two bacteria of the family rickettsiaceae: a re-evaluation of motility in an evolutionary perspective
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3914857/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/24505307
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0087718
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