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Abstract
Kinetoplastids are heterotrophic flagellated protists, including important parasites of humans and animals (trypanosomatids), and ecologically important free-living bacterial consumers (bodonids). Phylogenies have shown that the earliest-branching kinetoplastids are all parasites or obligate endosymbionts, whose highly-derived state makes reconstructing the ancestral state of the group challenging. We have isolated new strains of unusual free-living flagellates that molecular phylogeny shows to be most closely related to endosymbiotic and parasitic Perkinsela and Ichthyobodo species that, together with unidentified environmental sequences, form the clade at the base of kinetoplastids. These strains are therefore the first described free-living prokinetoplastids, and potentially very informative in understanding the evolution and ancestral states of morphological and molecular characteristics described in other kinetoplastids. Overall, we find that these organisms morphologically and ultrastructurally resemble some free-living bodonids and diplonemids, and possess nuclear genomes with few introns, polycistronic mRNA expression, high coding density, and derived traits shared with other kinetoplastids. Their genetic repertoires are more diverse than the best-studied free-living kinetoplastids, which is likely a reflection of their higher metabolic potential. Mitochondrial RNAs of these new species undergo the most extensive U insertion/deletion editing reported so far, and limited deaminative C-to-U and A-to-I editing, but we find no evidence for mitochondrial trans-splicing.
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1 Russian Academy of Sciences, Papanin Institute for Biology of Inland Waters, Borok, Russia (GRID:grid.4886.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 2192 9124); University of Tyumen, AquaBioSafe Laboratory, Tyumen, Russia (GRID:grid.446209.d) (ISNI:0000 0000 9203 3563)
2 University of Victoria, Department of Biology, Victoria, Canada (GRID:grid.143640.4) (ISNI:0000 0004 1936 9465)
3 Russian Academy of Sciences, Papanin Institute for Biology of Inland Waters, Borok, Russia (GRID:grid.4886.2) (ISNI:0000 0001 2192 9124)
4 University of British Columbia, Department of Botany, Vancouver, Canada (GRID:grid.17091.3e) (ISNI:0000 0001 2288 9830)