Naegleria lustrarea is a species of free-living amoeba belonging to the group Heterolobosea. It was described in 2024 from amoebae present in the gut of a salamander found in Arkansas. It is an amoeboflagellate, capable of transitioning from an amoeboid stage to a flagellate stage during its life cycle.

Naegleria lustrarea
Light micrograph of N. lustrarea showing eruptive hyaline pseudopodia (h), bulbus uroid (bu) and a large single nucleus (nu).
Scientific classification Edit this classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Phylum: Percolozoa
Class: Heterolobosea
Order: Schizopyrenida
Family: Vahlkampfiidae
Genus: Naegleria
Species:
N. lustrarea
Binomial name
Naegleria lustrarea
Becker & Silberman, 2024[1]
Type strain
CCAP 1518/36

Etymology

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The specific epithet lustraea is a Latin derivative of "to transit", as it is still unknown if the amoeba is an active inhabitant of the salamander gut or is merely passing through it.[1]

Taxonomy

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Naegleria lustrarea was discovered from the feces of a healthy female ringed salamander (Ambystoma annulatum) native to Arkansas, USA. Fecal samples were deposited in an agar plate with an Escherichia coli lawn. This plate was incubated until amoebae began generating a feeding front. These amoebae were promptly isolated and observed under microscopy. Their DNA was sequenced and through a phylogenetic analysis the amoebae were identified as members of the genus Naegleria. Researchers Brian M. Becker and Jeffrey D. Silberman described the amoebae as members of a new species and published the results with various coauthors in the Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology.[1]

Description

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Naegleria lustrarea is a species of amoebae, single-celled protists that generate pseudopodia. Each cell contains one nucleus with a large central nucleolus. During their life cycle they mainly exist as amoeboid trophozoites whose nuclei are ringed and contain refractile granules. These amoeba move attaching to the substrate with eruptive pseudopodia and, occasionally, leave cytoplasmic filaments and a bulbus uroid trailing behind. The amoeboid stages can transition into fast swimming flagellate stages, composed of elongated pear-shaped cells that move by using two equal-length flagella. The flagellate cells have a nucleus in the anterior region, possibly associated to the flagellar apparatus, and a contractile vacuole in the posterior region.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d e Becker, Brian M.; Banson, Idan; Walker, James M.; Deshwal, Anant; Brown, Matthew W.; Silberman, Jeffrey D. (9 May 2024). "Isolation of Naegleria lustrarea n. sp. (Excavata, Discoba, Heterolobosea) from the feces of Ambystoma annulatum (Ringed Salamander) in Northwest Arkansas". The Journal of Eukaryotic Microbiology: e13031. doi:10.1111/jeu.13031. PMID 38725295.