". . . That which we call a rose by any other name would smell as sweet."~ Juliet
Please note that Sigrid Neuhauser & Martin Kirchmair have recommended thatSorosphaerulareplaceSorosphaerafor the name of this genus becauseSorosphaeraJ. Schröter is preoccupied by the foraminiferan genusSorosphaeraBrady now that both Phytomyxea and Foraminifera are considered to belong to the supergroup Rhizaria. Since we cannot change the use ofSorosphaerathe plasmodiophorid in previous literature, we will keep usingSorosphaeraon this web site. We suggest, however, that publications in the future follow the recommendation byNeuhauser & Kirchmair (2011)and useSorosphaerulafor this genus.
Personal Comments
Sorosphaerais a special organism to me because it was my introduction to the plasmodiophorids by the late Charles E. Miller. When I joined the faculty of Environmental & Plant Biology (then it was the Department of Botany) at Ohio University in 1970, Charlie was excited to have a new colleague interested in nuclear structure and who could use the transmission electron microscope (TEM). He encouraged me to read his1958 paper onSorosphaera, and, once I did, we set off to Chapel Hill, NC, to collectVeronicawith galls for me to prepare for TEM (also seeCruciform Divisionpage). The first images I saw of the material in the TEM hooked me on the group, and several papers resulted from our TEM observations. A few years later we started finding populations ofVeronicawith galls on the Ohio University campus. We could not determine if the infected populations in Ohio were from material we brought back from Chapel Hill, or if they were there all along. I started using the galls onVeronicafor projects for students in a course on TEM, and that is how we were able to interest several students in the plasmodiophorids.
After I retired from Ohio University and moved from Ohio to Georgia, as I walked around the beautiful parks and neighborhoods in the greater Atlanta area, I often would reach down and grab a handful ofVeronicato look for galls (2005,2008,2011,2013,2014,2015,2016). Now that my wife and I have relocated from Georgia to Minnesota, I check for galls onVeronicaas we explore the beautiful parks in the greater Twin Cities area.
_____, _____, & D. G. Pechak. 1975.The ultrastructure of cruciform nuclear division inSorosphaera veronicae(Plasmodiophoromycete) [sic]. Amer. J. Bot. 62: 349-358.
Dylewski, D. P., J. P. Braselton, & C. E. Miller. 1978.Cruciform nuclear division inSorosphaera veronicae(Plasmodiophoromycetes). Amer. J. Bot. 65: 258-267.
Fraser, R. S. S. & S. T. Buczacki. 1983.Ribosomal RNA molecular weights and the affinities of the Plasmodiophorales. Trans. Br. Mycol. Soc. 80: 107-112.
Harris, S. E., J. P. Braselton, & C. E. Miller. 1980.Chromosomal number ofSorosphaera veronicae(Plasmodiophoromycetes) based on ultrastructural analysis of synaptonemal complexes. Mycologia 72: 916-925.
Miller, C. E. 1958.Morphology and cytology of the zoosporangia and cystosori ofSorosphaera veronicae. J. Elisha Mitchell Sci. Soc. 74: 49-64.
Neuhauser, S., L. Huber, & M. Kirchmair. 2009.Sorosphaera viticola, a plasmodiophorid parasite of grapevine. Phytopathol. Mediterr. 48: 136–139.
Neuhauser, S. & M. Kirchmair. 2011.Sorosphaerulanom. n. for the plasmodiophorid genusSorosphaeraJ. Schröter 1886 (Rhizaria: Endomyxa: Phytomyxea: Plasmodiophorida). J. Eukaryot. Microbiol. 58: 469–470.Doi: 10.1111/j.1550-7408.2011.00571.x
Palm, B. T. & M. Burk. 1933.The taxonomy of the Plasmodiophoraceae. Arch. Protistenk. 79: 263-276.
Talley, M. R., C. E. Miller, & J. P. Braselton. 1978.Notes on the ultrastructure of zoospores ofSorosphaera veronicae. Mycologia 70: 1241-1247.
Webb, P. C. R. 1935.The cytology and life-history ofSorosphaera veronicae. Ann. Bot. 49: 41-52.