DPANN
A superphylum of Archaea grouping taxa that display various environmental and metabolic features From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A superphylum of Archaea grouping taxa that display various environmental and metabolic features From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
DPANN is a superphylum of Archaea first proposed in 2013.[2] Many members show novel signs of horizontal gene transfer from other domains of life.[2] They are known as nanoarchaea or ultra-small archaea due to their smaller size (nanometric) compared to other archaea.
DPANN | |
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Parvarchaeum acidiphilum | |
Scientific classification | |
Domain: | Archaea |
Superphylum: | DPANN Rinke et al. 2013 |
Phyla[1] | |
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DPANN is an acronym formed by the initials of the first five groups discovered, Diapherotrites, Parvarchaeota, Aenigmarchaeota, Nanoarchaeota and Nanohaloarchaeota. Later Woesearchaeota and Pacearchaeota were discovered and proposed within the DPANN superphylum.[3] In 2017, another phylum Altiarchaeota was placed into this superphylum.[4] The monophyly of DPANN is not yet considered established, due to the high mutation rate of the included phyla, which can lead to the artifact of the long branch attraction (LBA) where the lineages are grouped basally or artificially at the base of the phylogenetic tree without being related.[5][6] These analyzes instead suggest that DPANN belongs to Euryarchaeota or is polyphyletic occupying various positions within Euryarchaeota.[5][6][7]
The DPANN groups together different phyla with a variety of environmental distribution and metabolism, ranging from symbiotic and thermophilic forms such as Nanoarchaeota, acidophiles like Parvarchaeota and non-extremophiles like Aenigmarchaeota and Diapherotrites. DPANN was also detected in nitrate-rich groundwater, on the water surface but not below, indicating that these taxa are still quite difficult to locate.[8]
Since the recognition of the kingdom rank by the ICNP, the proposed name for this group is kingdom Nanobdellati.[9]
They are characterized by being small in size compared to other archaea (nanometric size) and in keeping with their small genome, they have limited but sufficient catabolic capacities to lead a free life, although many are thought to be episymbionts that depend on a symbiotic or parasitic association with other organisms. Many of their characteristics are similar or analogous to those of ultra-small bacteria (CPR group).[3]
Limited metabolic capacities are a product of the small genome and are reflected in the fact that many lack central biosynthetic pathways for nucleotides, aminoacids, and lipids; hence most DPANN archaea, such as ARMAN archaea, which rely on other microbes to meet their biological requirements. But those that have the potential to live freely are fermentative and aerobic heterotrophs.[3]
They are mostly anaerobic and have not been cultivated. They live in extreme environments such as thermophilic, hyperacidophilic, hyperhalophilic or metal-resistant; or also in the temperate environment of marine and lake sediments. They are rarely found on the ground or in the open ocean.[3]
Tom A. Williams et al. 2017,[20] Castelle et al. 2015[3] and Dombrowski et al. 2020.[21] | Jordan et al. 2017[7] Cavalier-Smith2020[6] and Feng et al 2021.[22] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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DPANN may be the first divergent clade of archaea according to some phylogenetic analyses. Recent phylogenetic analyses have found the following phylogeny between phyla.[3][20][21]
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Other phylogenetic analyzes have suggested that DPANN could belong to Euryarchaeota or that it may even be polyphyletic occupying different positions within Euryarchaeota. It is also debated whether the phylum Altiarchaeota should be classified in DPANN or Euryarchaeota.[21][5] An alternative location for DPANN in the phylogenetic tree is as follows.[7][6][22] The groups marked in quotes are lineages assigned to DPANN, but phylogenetically separated from the rest.
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This section needs editing to comply with Wikipedia's Manual of Style. (August 2024) |
The currently accepted taxonomy is based on the List of Prokaryotic names with Standing in Nomenclature (LPSN)[23] and National Center for Biotechnology Information (NCBI).[24]
GTDB phylogeny of "DPANN"[25][26][27] | ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Superphylum "DPANN" Rinke et al. 2013 (= proposed kingdom Nanobdellati Rinke, Schwientek, Sczyrba, Ivanova, Anderson, Cheng, Darling, Malfatti, Swan, Gies, Dodsworth, Hedlund, Tsiamis, Sievert, Liu, Eisen, Hallam, Kyrpides, Stepanauskas, Rubin, Hugenholtz and Woyke 2024[28])
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