Coupling molecules and morphology to discover new clades of ciliates.

Jean-David Grattepanche1, Xyrus X Maurer-Alcalá1,2, Sarah Jeanne Tucker1, George B McManus3 and Laura A Katz1,2, (1)Smith College, Department of Biological Sciences, Northampton, MA, United States, (2)University of Massachusetts, Program in Organismic and Evolutionary Biology, Amherst, MA, United States, (3)University of Connecticut, Department of Marine Sciences, Groton, CT, United States
Abstract:
In a previous study using high-throughput sequencing (Grattepanche et al submitted, oral presentation?), we observe the presence of two clades of spirotrich ciliates mainly present in marine deep-water along the New England coast. These clades, clusters X1 and X2, are characterized by several deletions in their SSU-rDNA and have been observed elsewhere as both identical and similar sequences have been deposited on GenBank from other environmental studies, but lack morphological description. In order to link molecules (SSU-rDNA sequence) to their morphology, we sample below the photic zone (between 60 to 400m of depth) in the New England coast (Northeast Atlantic) in a transect crossing the continental shelf. We designed an oligonucleotide probe specific for choreotrich and oligotrich ciliates and another specific to clusters X1 and X2 to describe these clades through a combination of Fluorescence In Situ Hybridization (FISH) and light microscopy. Our aim is to increase our knowledge on the morphology of these ‘unknown’ clades of ciliates, which will allow for future ecological studies.