The Oxymonads (or Oxymonadida) are a group of flagellatedprotists found exclusively in the intestines of animals, mostly termites and other wood-eatinginsects. Along with the similar parabasalid flagellates, they harbor the symbioticbacteria that are responsible for breaking down cellulose. There is no evidence for presence of mitochondria (not even anaerobic mitochondrion-like organelles like hydrogenosomes or mitosomes) in oxymonads[1] and three species have been shown to completely lack any molecular markers of mitochondria.[2]
Most Oxymonads are around 50 μm in size and have a single nucleus, associated with four flagella. Their basal bodies give rise to several long sheets of microtubules, which form an organelle called an axostyle, but different in structure from the axostyles of parabasalids. The cell may use the axostyle to swim, as the sheets slide past one another and cause it to undulate. An associated fiber called the preaxostyle separates the flagella into two pairs. A few oxymonads have multiple nuclei, flagella, and axostyles.
Genus Saccinobaculus Cleveland-Hall & Sanders & Collier 1934
References
^Hampl, Vladimir (2016), Archibald, John M.; Simpson, Alastair G.B.; Slamovits, Claudio H.; Margulis, Lynn (eds.), "Preaxostyla", Handbook of the Protists, Cham: Springer International Publishing, pp. 1–36, doi:10.1007/978-3-319-32669-6_8-1, ISBN978-3-319-32669-6, retrieved 2024-04-15
^Treitlia, Sebastian C.; Kotykb, Michael; Yubukia, Naoji; Jirounkováa, Eliska; Vlasáková, Jitka; Smejkalováa, Pavla; Sípek, Petr; Cepicka, Ivan; Hampl, Vladimír (2018). "Molecular and Morphological Diversity of the Oxymonad Genera Monocercomonoides and Blattamonas gen. nov". Protist. 169 (5): 744–783. doi:10.1016/j.protis.2018.06.005. PMID30138782.