Treffer: Phylogenomics of neglected flagellated protists supports a revised eukaryotic tree of life
collection:CNRS
collection:ESE
collection:UNIV-PARIS-SACLAY
collection:AGREENIUM
collection:UNIVERSITE-PARIS-SACLAY
collection:GS-BIOSPHERA
collection:GS-LIFE-SCIENCES-HEALTH
collection:APT_QUALITE
collection:INEE-CNRS
1879-0445
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Eukaryotes evolved from prokaryotic predecessors in the early Proterozoic 1,2 and radiated from their already complex last common ancestor 3 , diversifying into several supergroups with unresolved deep evolutionary connections 4 . They evolved extremely diverse lifestyles, playing crucial roles in the carbon cycle 5,6 . Heterotrophic flagellates are arguably the most diverse eukaryotes 4,7-9 and often occupy basal positions in phylogenetic trees. However, many of them remain undersampled 4,10 and/or incertae sedis 4,11-18 . Progressive improvement of phylogenomic methods and a wider protist sampling have reshaped and consolidated major clades in the eukaryotic tree 13-19 . This is illustrated by the Opimoda 14 , one of the largest eukaryotic supergroups (Amoebozoa, Ancyromonadida, Apusomonadida, Breviatea, CRuMs, Malawimonadida, and Opisthokonta -including animals and fungi-) 4,14,19-22 . However, their deepest evolutionary relationships still remain uncertain. Here, we sequenced transcriptomes of poorly studied flagellates 23,24 (fourteen apusomonads 25,26 , seven ancyromonads 27 and one cultured Mediterranean strain of Meteora sporadica 17 ) and conducted comprehensive phylogenomics analyses with an expanded taxon sampling of early-branching protists. Our findings support the monophyly of Opimoda, with CRuMs being sister to the Amorphea (amoebozoans, breviates, apusomonads, and opisthokonts), and ancyromonads and malawimonads forming a moderately supported clade. By mapping key complex phenotypic traits onto this phylogenetic framework, we infer an opimodan biflagellate ancestor with an excavate-like feeding groove, which ancyromonads subsequently lost. While breviates and apusomonads retained the ancestral biflagellate state, some early-diverging Amorphea lost one or both flagella, facilitating the evolution of amoeboid morphologies, novel feeding modes, and palintomic cell division resulting in multinucleated cells. These innovations likely facilitated the subsequent evolution of fungal and metazoan multicellularity.