A Cross-Trophic Amoebozoan Predator Consumes Trophozoites and Cysts of Naegleria and Acanthamoeba
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Protistan predators are key regulators of microbial food webs, yet most are considered to occupy relatively narrow trophic niches. Here, we demonstrate that Mayorella spp. (Amoebozoa), isolated from marine and freshwater environments, exhibits exceptional trophic breadth spanning multiple trophic levels. Live-cell imaging revealed predation on bacteria, algae, dinoflagellates, diatoms, flagellates, ciliates, and multicellular prey including rotifers. Large or filamentous prey were engulfed whole or mechanically fragmented during ingestion. Notably, Mayorella consumed both trophozoites and cysts of free-living amoebae ( Naegleria and Acanthamoeba ), with clear digestion of cyst contents. Dense cultures showed aggregation around large prey and facultative cannibalism. Ingestion of microplastic-like particles occurred without evidence of digestion. Predator cell size and population density increased markedly when feeding on protist or mixed prey relative to bacterial diets, indicating pronounced trophic plasticity. These findings establish Mayorella as a broad-spectrum, cross-trophic predator with the capacity to exert top-down effects across microbial food webs and suggest a previously underappreciated role in the suppression of pathogenic free-living amoebae.