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Flow cytometry as a strategy to study the endosymbiosis of algae in Paramecium bursaria

โœ Scribed by Bogdan I. Gerashchenko; Naohisa Nishihara; Toshiko Ohara; Hiroaki Tosuji; Toshikazu Kosaka; Hiroshi Hosoya


Publisher
John Wiley and Sons
Year
2000
Tongue
English
Weight
731 KB
Volume
41
Category
Article
ISSN
0196-4763

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โœฆ Synopsis


Background:

The stable symbiotic association between paramecium bursaria and algae is of interest to study such mechanisms in biology as recognition, specificity, infection, and regulation. the combination of algae-free strains of p. bursaria, which have been recently established by treating their stocks of green paramecia with herbicide paraquat (hosoya et al.: zool sci 12: 807-810, 1995), with the cloned symbiotic algae isolated from p. bursaria (nishihara et al.: protoplasma 203: 91-99, 1998), provides an excellent clue to gain fundamental understanding of these phenomena.

Methods:

Flow cytometry and light microscopy have been employed to characterize the algal cells after they have been released from the paramecia by ultrasonic treatment. algal optical properties such as light scattering and endogenous chlorophyll fluorescence intensity have been monitored for symbiotic and free-living strains, and strains at stages of interaction with a host.

Results:

Neither algal morphology nor chlorophyll content has been found to be altered by sonication of green paramecia. this fact allows to interpret in adequate degree changes in the optical properties of symbiont that just has been released from the association with a host (decreased forward light scatter and chlorophyll fluorescence signals). optical characterization of both symbiotic and free-living algal strains with respect to their ability to establish symbioses with p. bursaria showed that chlorophyll content per cell volume seems to be a valuable factor for predicting a favorable symbiotic relationship between p. bursaria and algae.

Conclusions:

Flow cytometry combined with algae-free paramecia and cloned symbiotic algae identifies algal populations that may be recognized by host cells for the establishment of symbioses.


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