Maullinia

Maullinia
E: Resting spores of Maullinia sp. resting spores in Durvillaea antarctica
Scientific classification
Domain: Eukaryota
Clade: Diaphoretickes
Clade: Sar
Clade: Rhizaria
Phylum: Endomyxa
Class: Phytomyxea
Order: Phagomyxida
Family: Phagomyxidae
Genus: Maullinia
I. Maier, E. R. Parodi, R. Wester-meier et D. G. Müller 2000

Maullinia is a genus of intracellular, phytomyxid parasites found across the Southern Hemisphere though primarily in Chile, The Prince Edward Islands, South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand. These parasites infiltrate the cells of their brown algal hosts via cytoplasmic extensions called plasmodia that divide synchronously, becoming increasingly multi-nucleate and engulfing the host cell organelles as they grow. Eventually, as the plasmodia fill the entire cell volume, the host cells become hypertrophied and grow to 3- 4x their original size, showing up as swollen appendages or galls on the host tissue at a macroscopic level. These swollen regions will burst alongside the mature Maullinia plasmodia, releasing biflagellated zoospores to the inter- and extracellular space to disperse the infection further. Zoospores can come from sporangial plasmodia, as in M. ectocarpii, or from resting spores, as in M. braseltonii.

As Maullinia can infect a wide range commercially important brown algal hosts, they present a significant threat to kelp farming and mariculture efforts. These infections could also cause significant harm on a global scale to natural populations, as they are able to disperse over long distances via rafting and tend to thrive in the cooler waters where kelp are often found.