Parabasalid
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The parabasalids are a group of flagellated protists within the supergroup Excavata. Most of these eukaryotic organisms form a symbiotic relationship in animals. These include a variety of forms found in the intestines of termites<ref name="pmid15878133">Template:Cite journal</ref> and cockroaches, many of which have symbiotic bacteria that help them digest cellulose in woody plants. Other species within this supergroup are known parasites, and include human pathogens.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
CharacteristicsEdit
The flagella are arranged in one or more clusters near the anterior of the cell. Their basal bodies are linked to parabasal fibers that are associated with a prominent Golgi complex, together forming a parabasal apparatus distinctive to the group.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Attachment of a parabasal fiber to the first Golgi cisterna by thin filaments has been reported in Tritrichomonas foetus.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Usually they also give rise to a sheet of cross-like microtubules that runs down the center of the cell and in some cases projects past the end. This is called the axostyle, but is different in structure from the axostyles of oxymonads.Template:Citation needed
Parabasalids are anaerobic, and lack mitochondria, but this is now known to be a result of secondary loss, and they contain small hydrogenosomes which apparently developed from reduced mitochondria.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Similar relics have been found in other amitochondriate flagellates, and the parabasalids are probably related to them, forming a group called the metamonads. They lack the feeding grooves found in most others, but this is probably a secondary loss as well.Template:Citation needed
ClassificationEdit
Before reclassification, the parabasalids were divided into about seven<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> to 10 orders depending on sources. Present classification divides Parabasalia into four orders, that is, Trichonymphida, Spirotrichonymphida, Cristamonadida, and Trichomonadida. <ref name=Adl-2005>Template:Cite journal</ref>
- The trichomonads have one group of 4–6 flagella, one of which is attached to the side of the cell and often forms an undulating membrane. Many are found in vertebrate hosts, including Trichomonas vaginalis, which causes a sexually transmitted disease in humans.
- The other orders, formerly grouped as the hypermastigids, have a large number of flagellar clusters and are found exclusively in the guts of insects. (The term "Hypermastigida" is still occasionally encountered.<ref name="pmid17669157">Template:Cite journal</ref>)
EvolutionEdit
The parabasalid Trichomonas vaginalis is not known to undergo meiosis. However, Malik et al.<ref name=Malik>Template:Cite journal</ref> examined T. vaginalis for the presence of 29 genes that function in meiosis and found 27 such genes, including eight genes specific to meiosis in model organisms. These findings suggested that the capability for meiosis, and hence sexual reproduction, was likely present in a recent parabasalid ancestor of T. vaginalis.<ref name=Malik/>
ReferencesEdit
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