Cryptomycota Jones & Richards 2011 em. Karpov & Aleoshin 2014
Rozellida Lara et al. 2010 non Cavalier-Smith 2013
Rozellosporidia Karpov 2017
Rozellomycotina Tedersoo et al. 2018
Class
"Rozellomycetes" Tedersoo 2017
Order
Rozellales Corsaro 2022
Family
Rozellaceae Doweld 2013
Skirgielliaceae Doweld 2014
Cryptomycota ('hidden fungi'), Rozellida, or Rozellomycota are a
clade of micro-organisms that are either
fungi or a
sister group to fungi. They differ from classical fungi in that they lack
chitinous cell walls at any
trophic stage in their lifecycle, as reported by Jones and colleagues in 2011.[2][3] Despite their unconventional feeding habits,[clarification needed] chitin has been observed in the inner layer of
resting spores, and in immature resting spores for some species of Rozella, as indicated with
calcofluor-white stain as well as the presence of a fungal-specific
chitin synthase gene.[4]
Rozellida were first detected as
DNA sequences retrieved from a freshwater laboratory enclosure.
Phylogenetic analysis of these sequences formed a unique terminal clade of then unknown affiliation provisionally called after the first clone in the clade: LKM11.[5]
The only formally described genus in the clade is Rozella, which was previously considered a
chytrid. The existence of related organisms was known from
environmental DNA sequences.[6]
Additional members of the group were isolated in 2011 by a team led by Thomas Richards, from the
Natural History Museum in London, and also an evolutionary geneticist at the
University of Exeter, UK. The team used
DNA techniques to disclose the existence of unknown genetic material dredged from the university pond. Once they had a few unknown sequences they
fluorescently labeled small DNA sequences and let them bind to the matching DNA in the whole sample (
fluorescence in situ hybridization). Under
fluorescence microscopy, they could see that the possessor cells were
ovoid in shape and 3–5
micrometres across. They then established that the cryptomycota were present in other samples taken from further freshwater environments, soils and marine sediments.[7][8]
The common characteristic of the clade members is that they lack the chitinous
cell walls present in almost all previously discovered fungi (including
microsporidia) and which are a major feature of the kingdom. Without the chitin the cryptomycota can be
phagotrophic parasites that feed by attaching to, engulfing, or living inside other cells. Most known fungi feed by
osmotrophy—taking in nutrients from outside the cell.[7]
^Jones MD, Forn I, Gadelha C, Egan MJ, Bass D, Massana R, Richards TA (2011). "Discovery of novel intermediate forms redefines the fungal tree of life". Nature. 474 (7350): 200–3.
doi:
10.1038/nature09984.
PMID21562490.
S2CID4412818.