Extreme adaptations of species often cause such significant changes that their
evolutionary1 history is difficult to reconstruct.
Zoologists2 at the University of Basel in Switzerland have now discovered a new
parasite3 species that represents the missing link between
fungi4 and an extreme group of
parasites5. Researches are now able to understand for the first time the evolution of these parasites, causing disease in humans and animals. The study has been published in the latest issue of the scientific journal
Proceedings6 of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS). Parasites use their hosts to simplify their own lives. In order to do so, they evolved features that are so extreme that it is often impossible to compare them to other species. The evolution of these extreme adaptations is often impossible to reconstruct. The research group lead by Prof. Dieter Ebert from the Department of Environmental Science at the University of Basel has now discovered the missing link that explains how this large group of extreme parasites, the microsporidia, has evolved. The team was supported in their efforts by scientists from Sweden and the U.S.
Microsporidia are a large group of extreme parasites that invade humans and animals and cost great damage for health care systems and in agriculture; over 1,200 species are known. They live inside their host's cells and have highly
specialized7 features: They are only able to reproduce inside the host's cells, they have the smallest known genome of all organisms with a cell
nucleus8 (eukaryotes) and they posses no mitochondria of their own (the cell's power plant). In addition, they developed a specialized infection
apparatus9, the polar tube, which they use to insert themselves into the cells of their host. Due to their phenomenal high
molecular10 evolution rate, genome analysis has so far been rather unsuccessful: Their great genomic
divergence11 from all other known organisms further
complicates12 the study of their evolutionary lineage.