Rhodelphis
Rhodelphis is a single-celled archaeplastid that lives in aquatic environments and is the sister group to red algae and possibly Picozoa. While red algae have no flagellated stages and are generally photoautotrophic, Rhodelphis is a flagellated predator containing a non-photosynthetic plastid. This group is important to the understanding of plastid evolution because they provide insight into the morphology and biochemistry of early archaeplastids. Rhodelphis contains a remnant plastid that is not capable of photosynthesis, but may play a role in biochemical pathways in the cell like heme synthesis and iron-sulfur clustering. The plastid does not have a genome, but genes are targeted to it from the nucleus. Rhodelphis is ovoid with a tapered anterior end bearing two perpendicularly-oriented flagella.
Taxonomy
History and location
Rhodelphis was described in 2019 by Ryan M. R. Gawryluk and coauthors, through a paper published in Nature. The genus was created for two different cultures of protists isolated in previous years. Rhodelphis marinus was first collected in 2015 from marine coral sand in Island Bay Canh, Con Dao, Vietnam. Rhodelphis limneticus was first collected in 2016 from a freshwater lake in Chernigovskaya oblast, Ukraine. A third species was described in 2023, Rhodelphis mylnikovi, isolated from a freshwater pond near Montigny-le-Bretonneux, France.Species
To date, 4 species of Rhodelphis have been described.- Rhodelphis edaphicus
- Rhodelphis limneticus
- Rhodelphis marinus
- ''Rhodelphis mylnikovi''
Ecology
Description
Morphology
Rhodelphis is an ovoid unicellular organism with a diameter of 10-13 μm. The cells do not contain any pigments, so they appear mostly clear under a microscope and are covered in umbrella-shaped glycostyles. The cells are motile and can swim around using their two flagella. Originating just below the anterior end of the cell, the flagella are perpendicular to one another and are of approximately equal length. The posteriorly oriented flagellum is covered in hair-like mastigonemes. No ostensible feeding apparatus is present, but phagocytosis of prey takes place at the posterior end.Although it has not been identified using microscopy, evidence of plastid import proteins has revealed Rhodelphis'
Genetics
Rhodelphis is the sister group to the red algae, but the two groups differ substantially in their genetic makeup. Rhodelphis'The common ancestor of red algae and Rhodelphis resulted from a primary endosymbiotic event early in the evolution of archaeplastids. Rhodelphis was found to contain plastid-targeted proteins as well as homologs to protein-transporters found in chloroplasts. The genes that were targeted to the plastids matched those found in red algae. Despite the targeting of proteins from the nucleus to the plastid, Rhodelphis contains only two proteins that could be involved in photosynthesis, and it seems that the plastid genome has been completely lost.