Bibliographic Detail
Zimba, P.V., Shalygin, S., Huang, I.-S., Momcilovic, M. & Abdulla, H., 2020
Reference:
Zimba, P.V., Shalygin, S., Huang, I.-S., Momcilovic, M. & Abdulla, H. (2020). A new boring toxin producer – Perforafilum tunnelli gen. & sp. nov. (Oscillatoriales, Cyanobacteria) isolated from Laguna Madre, Texas, USA. Phycologia 60(1): 10-24.
Publication Date:
"Published online 02 October 2020"
Notes:
Phycologia 2021.
Abstract:
The Laguna Madre-Tamaulipas is the world’s largest hypersaline lagoon and is equally located in south
Texas, USA, and Tamaulipas, Mexico. Over 40% of its American surface area is covered by wind-tidal sand
flats containing cyanobacteria as the major autotrophic component of the microbial community.
A recent laboratory examination of these microbial mats revealed the presence of a boring, filamentous
cyanobacterium which, in culture, ‘drilled’ through an agar substrate. The observed clockwise/counterclockwise
rotation, gliding, and boring ability of the filaments was atypical for any known cyanobacterium.
The isolate from Laguna Madre produces nine toxins that were originally described from both
marine and freshwater habitats. Presence of a diverse array of bioactive metabolites in our unialgal
culture agrees with earlier work demonstrating diverse toxin production by marine cyanobacteria. Initial
comparison of this new taxon with its polyphasically closest genus, Oxynema, showed several morphological,
physiological, and phylogenetic differences, warranting establishment of a new family
Laspinemaceae, containing Perforafilum tunnelli gen. & sp. nov.
DOI:
10.1080/00318884.2020.1808389