2006
Hallmann A
Morphogenesis in the family Volvocaceae:
Different tactics for turning an embryo right-side out
PROTIST 157 (4): 445-461 OCT 2006
Abstract: Green algae of the family Volvocaceae provide an
unrivalled opportunity to analyze an evolutionary pathway leading from
unicellularity to multicellularity with division of labor. One key step
required for achieving multicellularity in this group was the development of a
process for turning an embryo inside out: a morphogenetic process that is now
known as "inversion," and that is a diagnostic feature of the group.
Inversion is essential because at the end of its embryonic cleavage divisions,
each volvocacean embryo contains all of the cells that will be present in an
adult, but the flagellar ends of all cells are pointed toward the interior,
rather than toward the exterior where they will need to be to function in
locomotion. Inversion has been studied in greatest detail in Volvox
carteri, but although all other volvocacean species have to struggle with the
same awkward situation of being wrong-side out at the end of cleavage, they do
it in rather different ways. Here, the inversion processes of six different
volvocacean species (Gonium pectorale, Pandorina morum, Eudorina unicocca, Volvox
carteri, Volvox tertius, and Volvox globator) are compared, in
order to illustrate the variation in inversion patterns that exists within this
family. The simplest inversion process occurs in the plate-shaped alga Gonium
pectorale, and the most complicated in the spherical alga Volvox
globator Gonium pectorale goes only from a concave-bowl shape to a slightly
convex plate. In Volvox globator, the posterior hemisphere inverts
completely before the anterior pole opens and the anterior hemisphere slides
over the already-inverted posterior hemisphere; during both halves of this
inversion process, the regions of maximum cell-sheet curvature move
progressively, as radially symmetrical waves, along the posterior-anterior axis.
Fukada K,
Inoue T, Shiraishi H
A posttranslationally regulated protease,
VheA, is involved in the liberation of juveniles from parental spheroids in Volvox
carteri
PLANT CELL 18 (10): 2554-2566 OCT 2006
Abstract: The lineage of volvocine
algae includes unicellular Chlamydomonas and multicellular Volvox in
addition to their colonial relatives intermediate in size and cell number. In
an asexual life cycle, daughter cells of Chlamydomonas hatch from parental cell
walls soon after cell division, while Volvox juveniles are released from
parental spheroids after the completion of various developmental events
required for the survival of multicellular juveniles. Thus, heterochronic
change in the timing of hatching is considered to have played an important role
in the evolution of multicellularity in volvocine algae. To study the hatching
process in Volvox carteri, we purified a 125- kD Volvox hatching
enzyme ( VheA) from a culture medium with enzymatic
activity to degrade the parental spheroids. The coding region of vheA contains
a prodomain with a transmembrane segment, a subtilisin- like Ser protease
domain, and a functionally unknown domain, although purified 125- kD VheA does not contain a prodomain. While 143- kD VheA
with a prodomain is synthesized long before the hatching stage, 125- kD VheA is
released into the culture medium during hatching due to cleavage processing at
the site between the prodomain and the subtilisin- like Ser protease domain,
indicating that posttranslational regulation is involved in the determination
of the timing of hatching.
Babinger
K, Hallmann A, Schmitt R
Translational control of regA, a key gene
controlling cell differentiation in Volvox carteri
DEVELOPMENT 133 (20): 4045-4051 OCT 15 2006
Abstract: The complete
division of labour between the reproductive and somatic cells of the green alga
Volvox carteri is controlled by three types of genes. One of these is
the regA gene, which controls terminal differentiation of the somatic cells.
Here, we examined translational control elements located in the 5' UTR of regA,
particularly the eight upstream start codons (AUGs) that have to be bypassed by
the translation machinery before regA can be translated. The results of our
systematic mutational, structural and functional analysis of the 5' UTR led us
to conclude that a ribosome-shunting mechanism-rather than leaky scanning,
ribosomal reinitiation, or internal ribosome entry site (IRES)-mediated
initiation-controls the translation of regA mRNA. This mechanism, which
involves dissociation of the 40S initiation complex from the message, followed
by reattachment downstream, in order to bypass a secondary structure block in
the mRNA, was validated by deleting the predicted 'landing site' (which
prevented regA expression) and inserting a stable 64 nucleotide hairpin just
upstream of this site (which did not prevent regA expression). We believe that
this is the first report suggesting that translation of an mRNA in a green
eukaryote is controlled by ribosome shunting.
Nozaki H,
Ott FD, Coleman AW
Morphology, molecular phylogeny and
taxonomy of two new species of Pleodorina (Volvoceae, Chlorophyceae)
JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY 42 (5): 1072-1080 OCT 2006
Abstract: The volvocacean genus
Pleodorina has been morphologically characterized as having small somatic cells
in spheroidal colonies and anisogamous sexual reproduction with sperm packets.
In this study we examined two new species that can be assigned to the genus
Pleodorina based on morphology: P. starrii H. Nozaki et al. sp. nov. and P. thompsonii F. D. Ott et
al. sp. nov. P. starrii was collected from Japan and had 32- or
64-celled colonies with anterior somatic cells and spheroidal individual
cellular sheaths that were weakly attached to each other within the colonial
envelope. P. thompsonii from Texas (USA) exhibited four or 12 somatic cells in
the anterior pole of 16- or 32-celled colonies, respectively, and had a single
large pyrenoid in the chloroplast of mature reproductive cells. The chloroplast
multigene phylogeny placed P. starrii and P. indica (Iyenger) H. Nozaki in a
clade that was robustly separated from the type species P. californica Shaw and
P. japonica H. Nozaki. Pleodorina thompsonii was resolved as a basal branch
within a large monophyletic group (Eudorina group) composed of Eudorina,
Pleodorina and Volvox (excluding section Volvox). Thus,
Pleodorina was found among three separate lineages within the Eudorina group in
which Eudorina and Volvox were also resolved as nonmonophyletic. The DNA
sequences from additional species/strains as well as recognition of
morphological attributes that characterize the monophyletic groups within the
Eudorina group are needed to construct a natural generic classification within
these members of the Volvocaceae.
Nedelcu
AM, Michod RE
The evolutionary origin of an altruistic
gene
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY AND EVOLUTION 23 (8): 1460-1464 AUG 2006
Abstract: Although the
conditions favoring altruism are being increasingly understood, the
evolutionary origins of the genetic basis for this behavior remain elusive.
Here, we show that reproductive altruism (i.e., a sterile soma) in the
multicellular green alga, Volvox carteri, evolved via the co-option of a
life-history gene whose expression in the unicellular ancestor was conditioned
on an environmental cue (as an adaptive strategy to enhance survival at an
immediate cost to reproduction) through shifting its expression from a temporal
(environmentally induced) into a spatial (developmental) context. The gene
belongs to a diverged and structurally heterogeneous multigene family sharing a
SAND-like domain (a DNA-binding module involved in gene transcription
regulation). To our knowledge, this is the first example of a social gene
specifically associated with reproductive altruism, whose origin can be traced
back to a solitary ancestor. These findings complement recent proposals that
the differentiation of sterile castes in social insects involved the co-option
of regulatory networks that control sequential shifts between phases in the
life cycle of solitary insects.
Duncan L,
Nishii I, Howard A, et al.
Orthologs and paralogs of regA, a master
cell-type regulatory gene in Volvox carteri
CURRENT GENETICS 50 (1): 61-72 JUL 2006
Abstract: The multicellular
green alga Volvox carteri forma nagariensis has only two cell types:
terminally differentiated somatic cells and reproductive cells. The regA gene
maintains the terminally differentiated state of the somatic cells, apparently
by repressing transcription of genes required for chloroplast biogenesis and
thereby preventing cell growth. Because the RegA protein sequence bore no
obvious motifs, we are attempting to identify regions of functional importance
by searching for strongly conserved domains in RegA orthologs. Here we report
the cloning and characterization of regA from the most closely related known
taxon, V. carteri f. kawasakiensis. Given the closeness of the relationship
between these two formas, their regA genes are surprisingly different: they
differ in the number of introns and by several lengthy indels,
and they encode proteins that are only 80% identical. We also serendipitously
discovered a paralogous gene immediately upstream of each regA locus. The two
regA genes, both upstream paralogs and several genes in Chlamydomonas (the
closest unicellular relative of Volvox) encode a conserved region (the
VARL domain) that contains what appears to be a DNA-binding SAND domain. This
discovery has opened up a new avenue for exploring how regA and the terminally
differentiated state that it controls evolved.
Short MB, Solari CA, Ganguly S, et
al.
Flows driven by flagella of multicellular
organisms enhance long-range molecular transport
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
103 (22): 8315-8319 MAY 30 2006
Abstract: Evolution from
unicellular organisms to larger multicellular ones requires matching their
needs to the rate of exchange of molecular nutrients with the environment. This
logistic problem poses a severe constraint on development. For organisms whose
body plan is a spherical shell, such as the volvocine green algae, the current
(molecules per second) of needed nutrients grows quadratically with radius,
whereas the rate at which diffusion alone exchanges molecules grows linearly, leading
to a bottleneck radius beyond which the diffusive current cannot meet metabolic
demands. By using Volvox carteri, we examine the role that advection of
fluid by the coordinated beating of surface-mounted flagella plays in enhancing
nutrient uptake and show that it generates a boundary layer of concentration of
the diffusing solute. That concentration gradient produces an exchange rate
that is quadratic in the radius, as required, thus circumventing the bottleneck
and facilitating evolutionary transitions to multicellularity and germ-soma
differentiation in the volvocalean green algae.
Nedelcu AM
Evidence for p53-like-mediated stress
responses in green algae
FEBS LETTERS 580 (13): 3013-3017 MAY 29 2006
Abstract: The tumor suppressor protein,
p53, plays a major role in cellular responses to stress and DNA damage in
animals; despite its critical function, p53 homologs have not been identified
in any algal or plant lineage. This study employs a functional and evolutionary
approach to test for a p53 functional equivalent in green algae. Specifically,
the study: (i) investigated the effect of two synthetic compounds known to
interfere with p53 activity; (ii) searched for sequences with similarity to
known p53-induced genes; and (iii) analyzed the expression pattern of one such
sequence. The findings reported here suggest that a p53 functional equivalent
is present and mediates cellular responses to stress in green algae.
Hallmann
A, Wodniok S
Swapped green algal promoters:
aphVIII-based gene constructs with Chlamydomonas flanking sequences work as dominant
selectable markers in Volvox and vice versa
PLANT CELL REPORTS 25 (6): 582-591 JUN 2006
Abstract: Production of
transgenic organisms is a well-established, versatile course of action in
molecular biology. Genetic engineering often requires heterologous, dominant
antibiotic resistance genes that have been used as selectable markers in many
species. However, as heterologous 5' and 3' flanking sequences often result in
very low expression rates, endogenous flanking sequences, especially promoters,
are mostly required and are easily obtained in model organisms, but it is much
more complicated and time-consuming to get appropriate sequences from less
common organisms. In this paper, we show that aminoglycoside
3'-phosphotransferase gene (aphVIII) based constructs with 3' and 5'
untranslated flanking sequences (including promoters) from the multicellular
green alga Volvox work in the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas and
flanking sequences from Chlamydomonas work in Volvox, at least if a low
expression rate is compensated by an enforced high gene dosage. This strategy
might be useful for all investigators that intend to transform species in which
genomic sequences are not available, but sequences from related organisms exist.
Cheng Q, Hallmann A, Edwards L, et al.
Characterization of a
heat-shock-inducible hsp70 gene of the green alga Volvox carteri
GENE 371 (1): 112-120 APR 12 2006
Abstract: The green alga Volvox
carteri possesses several thousand cells, but just two cell types: large
reproductive cells called gonidia, and small, biflagellate somatic cells.
Gortidia are derived from large precursor cells that are created during embryogenesis
by asymmetric cell divisions. The J domain protein GlsA (Gonidia/ess A) is
required for these asymmetric divisions and is believed to function with an
Hsp70 partner. As a first step toward identifying this partner, we cloned and
characterized V carleri hsp70A, which is orthologous to HSP70A of the related
alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Like HSP70A, V carleri hsp70A contains multiple
heat shock elements (HSEs) and is highly inducible by heat shock. Consistent
with these properties, Volvox transformants that harbor a glsA antisense
transgene that is driven by an hsp70A promoter fragment express Gls phenotypes
that are temperature-dependent. hsp70A appears to be
the only gene in the genome that encodes a cytoplasmic Hsp70, so we conclude
that Hsp70A is clearly the best candidate to be the chaperone that participates
with GlsA in asymmetric cell division.
Cheng Q, Balzer E, Miller SM, et al.
Effect of histone deacetylase inhibitors
on tubulin acetylation and development in Volvox carteri (Volvocales)
JOURNAL OF PHYCOLOGY 42 (2): 417-422 APR 2006
Abstract: Volvox
carteri f. nagariensis (Iyengar) possesses several thousand cells of just two types,
gonida and somatic cells, that are set apart by
asymmetric cell division. Because the division apparatus contains microtubules
enriched in acetylated alpha-tubulin, we wished to know whether acetylated
tubulin plays any role in regulating division symmetry. Two different human
histone deacetylases (HDACs) have been shown to deacetylate tubulin in vivo,
thereby regulating cell motility. Here we set out to determine: (1) whether
HDAC inhibitors that increase tubulin acetylation in animal cells have the same
effect in V. carteri, (2) whether increasing acetylated tubulin affects
microtubule stability, and (3) whether increasing acetylated tubulin affects
division symmetry. Embryos exposed to two HDAC inhibitors, trichostatin A (TSA)
and tubacin, accrued dramatically higher levels of acetylated tubulin (and more
acetylated microtubules) and were significantly more sensitive to colchicine
than controls. However, while TSA-treated embryos cleaved aberrantly to produce
adults with abnormal morphology, tubacin-treated embryos developed normally. We
conclude that increasing tubulin acetylation subtly alters microtubule
stability, but does not appear to affect cell division in V. carteri.
Michod RE, Viossat Y, Solari CA, et al.
Life-history evolution and the origin of
multicellularity
JOURNAL OF THEORETICAL BIOLOGY 239 (2): 257-272 MAR 21 2006
Abstract: The fitness of an
evolutionary individual can be understood in terms of its two basic components:
survival and reproduction. As embodied in current theory, trade-offs between
these fitness components drive the evolution of life-history traits in extant
multicellular organisms. Here, we argue that the evolution of germ-soma
specialization and the emergence of individuality at a new higher level during
the transition from unicellular to multicellular organisms are also
consequences of trade-offs between the two components of fitness-survival and
reproduction. The models presented here explore fitness trade-offs at both the
cell and group levels during the unicellular-multicellular transition. When the
two components of fitness negatively covary at the lower level there is an
enhanced fitness at the group level equal to the covariance of components at
the lower level. We show that the group fitness trade-offs are initially
determined by the cell level trade-offs. However, as the transition proceeds to
multicellularity, the group level trade-offs depart from the cell level ones,
because certain fitness advantages of cell specialization may be realized only
by the group. The curvature of the trade-off between fitness components is a
basic issue in life-history theory and we predict that this Curvature is
concave in single-celled organisms but becomes increasingly convex as group
size increases in multicellular organisms. We argue that the increasingly
convex curvature of the trade-off function is driven by the initial cost of
reproduction to Survival which increases as group size increases. To illustrate
the principles and conclusions of the model, we consider aspects of the biology
of the volvocine green algae, which contain both unicellular and multicellular
members.
Solari CA, Kessler JO, Michod RE
A hydrodynamics approach to the
evolution of multicellularity: Flagellar motility and germ-soma differentiation
in volvocalean green algae
AMERICAN NATURALIST 167 (4): 537-554 APR 2006
Abstract: During the unicellular-multicellular
transition, there are opportunities and costs associated with larger size. We
argue that germ-soma separation evolved to counteract the increasing costs and
requirements of larger multicellular colonies. Volvocalean green algae are
uniquely suited for studying this transition because they range from unicells
to multicellular individuals with germ-soma separation. Because Volvocales need
flagellar beating for movement and to avoid sinking, their motility is modeled
and analyzed experimentally using standard hydrodynamics. We provide
comparative hydrodynamic data of an algal lineage composed of organisms of
different sizes and degrees of complexity. In agreement with and extending the
insights of Koufopanou, we show that the increase in cell specialization as
colony size increases can be explained in terms of increased motility
requirements. First, as colony size increases, soma must evolve, the
somatic-to-reproductive cell ratio increasing to keep colonies buoyant and
motile. Second, increased germ-soma specialization in larger colonies increases
motility capabilities because internalization of non-flagellated germ cells
decreases colony drag. Third, our analysis yields a limiting maximum size of
the volvocalean spheroid that agrees with the sizes of the largest species
known. Finally, the different colony designs in Volvocales reflect the
trade-offs between reproduction, colony size, and motility.
Solari CA, Ganguly S,
Kessler JO, et al.
Multicellularity and the
functional interdependence of motility and molecular transport
PROCEEDINGS OF THE NATIONAL ACADEMY OF SCIENCES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
103 (5): 1353-1358 JAN 31 2006
Abstract: Benefits, costs, and requirements accompany the
transition from motile totipotent unicellular organisms to multicellular
organisms having cells specialized into reproductive (germ) and vegetative
(sterile soma) functions such as motility. In flagellated colonial organisms
such as the volvocalean green algae, organized beating by the somatic cells'
flagella yields propulsion important in phototaxis and chemotaxis. It has not been
generally appreciated that for the larger colonies flagellar stirring of
boundary layers and remote transport are fundamental for maintaining a
sufficient rate of metabolite turnover, one not attainable by diffusive
transport alone. Here, we describe experiments that quantify the role of
advective dynamics in enhancing productivity in germ soma-differentiated
colonies. First, experiments with suspended deflagellated colonies of Volvox carteri show that
forced advection improves productivity. Second, particle imaging velocimetry of
fluid motion around colonies immobilized by micropipette aspiration reveals
flow fields with very large characteristic velocities U extending to length
scales exceeding the colony radius R. For a typical metabolite diffusion constant
D, the associated Peclet number Pe = 2UR/D >> 1, indicative of the
dominance of advection over diffusion, with striking augmentation at the cell
division stage. Near the colony surface, flows generated by flagella can be
chaotic, exhibiting mixing due to stretching and folding. These results imply
that hydrodynamic transport external to colonies provides a crucial boundary
condition, a source for supplying internal diffusional dynamics.
Hallmann A
The pherophorins: common,
versatile building blocks in the evolution of extracellular matrix architecture
in Volvocales
PLANT JOURNAL 45 (2): 292-307 JAN 2006
Abstract: Green algae of the order Volvocales provide an unrivalled
opportunity for exploring the transition from unicellularity to
multicellularity. They range from unicells, like Chlamydomonas, through
homocytic colonial forms with increasing cooperation of individual cells, like
Gonium or Pandorina, to heterocytic multicellular forms with different cell
types and a complete division of labour, like Volvox. A fundamental
requirement for the evolution of multicellularity is the development of a
complex, multifunctional extracellular matrix (ECM). The ECM has many
functions, which can change under developmental control or as a result of
environmental factors. Here molecular data from 15 novel proteins are
presented. These proteins have been identified in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii,
Gonium pectorale, Pandorina morum and Volvox carteri, and all
belong to a single protein family, the pherophorins. Pherophorin-V1 is shown to
be a glycoprotein localized to the 'cellular zone' of the V. carteri ECM.
Pherophorin-V1 and -V2 mRNAs are strongly induced not only by the sex inducer,
which triggers sexual development at extremely low concentrations, but also by
mechanical wounding. Like the extensins of higher plants, which are also
developmentally controlled or sometimes inducible by wounding, the pherophorins
contain a (hydroxy-) proline-rich (HR) rod-like domain and are abundant within
the extracellular compartment. In contrast to most extensins, pherophorins have
additional globular A and B domains on both ends of
the HR domains. Therefore pherophorins most closely resemble a particular class
of higher plant extensin, the solanaceous lectins (e. g. potato lectin),
suggesting multivalent carbohydrate-binding functions are present within the A
and B domains and are responsible for cross-linking. Our results suggest that
pherophorins are used as the building blocks for the extracellular scaffold
throughout the Volvocales, with the characteristic mesh sizes in different ECM
structures being a result of the highly diverse extensions of the HR domains.
Pherophorins have therefore been a versatile element during the evolution of
ECM architecture in these green algae.
2005
Yoshida H,
Yokomori T, Suyama A. A simple classification of the
volvocine algae by formal languages.
BULLETIN OF
MATHEMATICAL BIOLOGY 67 (6): 1339-1354 NOV 2005
Abstract: There
are several explanations of why certain primitive multicellular organisms
aggregate in particular forms and why their constituent cells cooperate with
one another to a particular degree. Utilizing the framework of formal language
theory, we have derived one possible simple classification of the volvocine
algae-one of the primitive multicells-for some forms of aggregation and some
degrees of cooperation among cells. The volvocine algae range from the unicellular
Chlamydonionas to the multicellular Volvox globator, which has thousands of
cells. The classification we use in this paper is based on the complexity of
Parikh sets of families on Chomsky hierarchy in formal language theory. We show
that an alga with almost no space closed to the environment, e.g., Gonium
pectorale, can be characterized by PsFIN, one with a closed space and no
cooperation, e.g., Eudorina elegans, by PsCF, and one with a closed space and
cooperation, e.g., Volvox globator, by Ps lambda SC. This classification should
provide new insights into the necessity for specific forms and degrees of
cooperation in the volvocine algae. (c) 2005 Society for
Mathematical Biology.
Cheng Q,
Pappas V, Hallmann A, et al. Hsp70A
and GlsA interact as partner chaperones to regulate asymmetric division in Volvox.
DEVELOPMENTAL
BIOLOGY 286 (2): 537-548 OCT 15 2005
Abstract: GlsA, a
J-protein chaperone, is required for the asymmetric divisions that set aside
germ and somatic cell precursors during embryogenesis in Volox carteri, and
previous evidence indicated that this function requires an intact Hsp70-binding
site. To determine if Hsp70A, the only known cytoplasmic Hsp70 in V. carteri,
is the chaperone partner of GlsA, we investigated the localization of the two
proteins during critical stages of embryogenesis and tested their capacity to
interact. We found that a substantial fraction of Hsp70A co-localizes with
GlsA, both in interphase and mitotic blastomeres. In addition, Hsp70A
coimmunoprecipitated with GlsA, and co-expression of GlsA and Hsp70A variants
partially rescued the Gls phenotype of a glsA mutant, whereas neither variant by
itself rescued the mutant phenotype. Immunofluorescence analysis demonstrated
that GlsA is about equally abundant in all blastomeres at all cleavage stages
examined but that Hsp70A is more abundant in anterior (asymmetrically dividing)
blastomeres than in posterior (symmetrically dividing) blastomeres during the
period of asymmetric division. We conclude that Hsp70A and GlsA function as
chaperone partners that regulate asymmetric division and that the relative
abundance of Hsp70A in asymmetrically dividing embryos may determine which
blastomeres divide asymmetrically and which do not.
Aono N, Inoue
T, Shiraishi H. Genes specifically expressed in sexually differentiated
female spheroids of Volvox carteri.
JOURNAL OF
BIOCHEMISTRY 138 (4): 375-382 OCT 2005
Abstract: Volvox
carteri is a multicellular green alga with only two cell types, somatic cells
and reproductive cells. Phylogenetic analysis suggests that this organism has
evolved from a Chlamydomonas-like unicellular ancestor along with
multicellularity, cellular differentiation, and a change in the mode of sexual
reproduction from isogamy to oogamy. To examine the mechanism of sexual
differentiation and the evolution of oogamy, we isolated 6 different cDNA
sequences specifically expressed in sexually differentiated female spheroids.
The genes for the cDNAs were designated SEF1 to SEF6. The time course of
accumulation of each mRNA was shown to be distinct. The expression of some of
these genes was not significantly affected when the sexual inducer was removed
after the induction of sexual development. Sequence analysis indicates that
SEF5 and SEF6 encode pherophorin-related proteins. Of these, SEF5 has the
unique structural feature of a polyproline stretch in the C-terminal domain in
addition to the one found in the central region.
Wadhwa V, Kumar S, Rai S, et al. A 'pseudo outbreak' of the contamination of blood cultures
with Volvox globator.
ANNALS OF
TROPICAL MEDICINE AND PARASITOLOGY 99 (7): 719-720 OCT 2005
2004
Kirk MM, Kirk
DL
Exploring germ-soma differentiation in Volvox
JOURNAL OF BIOSCIENCES 29 (2): 143-152 JUN 2004
Just A,
Gruber I, Wober M, et al.
Novel method for the cryopreservation of testicular sperm and ejaculated
spermatozoa from patients with severe oligospermia: a pilot study
FERTILITY AND STERILITY 82 (2): 445-447 AUG 2004
Abstract:
Objective: To
investigate Volvox globator as an easy-to-handle vehicle and as a safe
alternative for cryopreservation of functional motile sperm cells.
Design:
Prospective, controlled, clinical pilot study.
Setting: Two in
vitro fertilization (IVF) outpatient clinics for reproductive medicine.
Patient(s):
Fifteen patients with severe male infertility (density <100 motile sperm per
milliliter) who were recruited from two IVF programs. The sperm cells were not
intended for clinical use after thawing.
Intervention(s):
In each case, a predetermined number (n = 8) of motile and morphologically
intact sperm cells were injected into each Volvox sphere and then
cryopreserved. The quality of the sperm cells and the handling of the Volvox
spheres were verified.
Main Outcome
Measure(s): Postthaw recovery rate in cases of severe male infertility and the
amount of motile sperm after thawing.
Result(s): The
postthaw recovery rate was 100%. At least 60% of the sperm cells were motile
after thawing.
Conclusion(s): The
use of the spherical algae Volvox globator offers a promising,
inexpensive, and easy approach to the cryopreservation of functional motile
sperm cells. Volvox globator is an alternative in countries that
prohibit the destructive use of oocytes, even after fertilization has failed.
Jakobiak T,
Mages W, Scharf B, et al.
The bacterial paromomycin resistance gene, aphH, as a dominant selectable
marker in Volvox carteri
PROTIST 155 (4): 381-393 DEC 2004
Abstract:
The
aminoglycoside antibiotic paromomycin that is highly toxic to the green alga Volvox
carteri is efficiently inactivated by aminoglycoside 3'-phosphotransferase from
Streptomyces rimosus. Therefore, we made constructs in which the bacterial aphH
gene encoding this enzyme was combined with Volvox cis-regulatory
elements in an attempt to develop a new dominant selectable marker -
paromomycin resistance (Pm-R) - for use in Volvox nuclear
transformation. The construct that provided the most efficient transformation
was one in which aphH was placed between a chimeric promoter that was generated
by fusing the Volvox hsp70 and rbcS3 promoters and the 3' UTR of the Volvox
rbcS3 gene. When this plasmid was used in combination with a high-impact
biolistic device, the frequency of stable Pm-R transformants ranged about 15
per 106 target cells. Due to rapid and sharp selection, Pm-R transformants were
readily isolated after six days, which is half the time required for previously
used markers. Co-transformation of an unselected marker ranged about 30%. The
chimeric aphH gene was stably integrated into the Volvox genome,
frequently as tandem multiple copies, and was expressed at a level that made
selection of Pm-R transformants simple and unambiguous. This makes the
engineered bacterial aphH gene an efficient dominant selection marker for the
transformation and co-transformation of a broad range of V carteri strains
without the recurring need for using auxotrophic recipient strains.
Pappas V,
Blakely S, Wetzel M, et al.
Functional analysis of the Volvox asymmetric division protein GlsA
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL 15: 218A-218A 1207 Suppl. S NOV 2004
Cheng Q,
Miller SM
Cytoplasmic Hsp70 distribution correlates with asymmetric division in the
green alga Volvox carteri
MOLECULAR BIOLOGY OF THE CELL 15: 218A-218A 1206 Suppl. S NOV 2004
Kirk DL
Volvox
CURRENT BIOLOGY,
14, R599-R600; for pdf click here
Nedelcu AM, Marcu
O, and Michod RE.
Sex as a response
to oxidative stress: A two-fold increase in cellular reactive oxygen species
activates sex genes.
P ROY SOC LOND B BIO, 271, 1591-1596; for pdf click here
Abstract:
Organisms are
constantly subjected to factors that can alter the cellular redox balance and
result in the formation of a series of highly reactive molecules known as reactive oxygen species (ROS). As ROS can be damaging to biological
structures, cells evolved a series of mechanisms (e.g., cell-cycle arrest,
programmed cell death) to respond to high levels of ROS (i.e., oxidative
stress). Recently, we presented evidence
that in a facultatively sexual lineage – the multicellular green alga Volvox
carteri – sex is an additional response to increased levels of stress, and
likely ROS and DNA damage. Here, we show that in V. carteri (i) sex is
triggered by a ca. two-fold increase in the level of cellular ROS (induced
either by the natural sex-inducing stress, namely heat, or by blocking the
mitochondrial electron transport chain with antimycin A), and (ii) ROS are
responsible for the activation of sex genes. As most types of stress result in
the overproduction of ROS, we believe that our findings will prove to extend to
other facultatively sexual lineages, which could be indicative of the ancestral role of sex as an adaptive response
to stress and ROS-induced DNA damage.
Nedelcu AM and Michod RE.
Evolvability, modularity, and individuality during
the transition to multicellularity in
volvocalean green algae.
In Schlosser G and Wagner G (eds) “Modularity in development and evolution”. Pp. 466-489. University of Chicago Press. (for pdf
click here)
2003
Desnitskiy AG.
Peculiarities
of the geographical distribution of coenobial volvocine algae (Volvocaceae,
Chlorophyta).
Botanical
Journal (St
Petersburg). 2003. Vol.
88. N 11. pp. 52-61.(in
Russian, with English Summary)
Abstract:
Data on the geographical distribution of 36 species
from 7 genera of the family Volvocaceae sensu Nozaki (Pandorina, Volvulina,
Yamagishiella, Eudorina, Platydorina, Pleodorina and Volvox) have been
summarized. Both cosmopolitan species and species with local distribution have
been detected. An attempt was made to trace a correlation of latitudinal
distribution of the coenobial volvocine algae with obligatory differentiated
somatic cells (22 species of the genera Volvox and Pleodorina) with
peculiarities of proceeding of the cell divisions during asexual developmental cycle.
In high latitudes of the Northern Hemisphere (northward of 50-57° north) only 3
species of Volvox occur, in which the formation of new coenobia (a series of
consecutive gonidial divisions) starts with the light period (in the morning),
the rate of division is slow and the gonidial divisions are temporarily blocked
in darkness.
Schmitt R
Differention of germinal and somatic cells in Volvox carteri
CURRENT OPINION IN MICROBIOLOGY
6 (6): 608-613 DEC 2003
Abstract:
Volvox carteri is a spherical alga with a complete division of labor between
around 2000 biflagellate somatic cells and 16 asexual reproductive cells
(gonidia). It provides an attractive system for studying how a molecular
genetic program for cell-autonomous differentiation is encoded within the
genome. Three types of genes have been identified as key players in germ-soma
differentiation: a set of gls genes that act in the embryo to shift
cell-division planes, resulting in asymmetric divisions that set apart the
large-small sister-cell pairs; a set of lag genes that act in the large
gonidial initials to prevent somatic differentiation; and the regA gene, which
acts in the small somatic initials to prevent reproductive development.
Somatic-cell-specific expression of regA is controlled by intronic enhancer and
silencer elements.
Nozaki H
Origin
and evolution of the genera Pleodorina and Volvox (Volvocales)
BIOLOGIA 58 (4): 425-431 JUL 2003
Abstract:
The previous molecular phylogenetic study using 6021 base pairs from five
chloroplast genes suggested that two species of Pleodorina (P. californica, P.
japonica) might have evolved from a Volvox-like alga by the decrease in colony
cell number and size. However, number of species of the genus Volvox was very
limited especially in the section Merrillosphaera. In
the present study, 6021 base pairs of the concatenated five chloroplast genes
from 10 strains representing seven taxa of the genus Volvox were added to the
previous data matrix. The sequence data resolved two anisogamous/oogamous
clades within a large monophyletic group comprising five advanced genera of the
Volvocaceae (Yamagishiella, Platydorina, Eudorina, Pleodorina and Volvox), one
containing Volvox sect. Volvox and the anisogamous genus Platydorina (32-celled
flattened colony), and the other (Eudorina group) composed of three other
sections of Volvox, Pleodorina and Eudorina. The isogamous genus Yamagishiella
(32-celled colony) was positioned basally to the Eudorina group. Therefore,
evolution of anisogamy with sperm packets from isogamy might have occurred
twice within the Volvocaceae. Based on the present molecular phylogenetic
analysis, species of Volvox and Pleodorina within the Eudorina group
represented three and two, respectively, separate lineages. One
the three Volvox lineages [composed of V (sect. Merrillosphaera)
carteri, V (sect. Merrillosphaera) obversus, V. (sect.
Merrillosphaera) tertius, V. (sect. Merrillosphaera)
africanus and V (sect. Copelandosphaera) dissipatrix] was sister to the
monophyletic group consisting of one of the two Pleodorina lineages (P.
californica and P. japonica) and V (sect. Janetosphaera)
aureus. In addition, species of Eudorina were basal to the two lineages
of Pleodorina and three Volvox lineages within the Eudorina group, representing
the ancestral situation of Pleodorina/Volvox (excluding sect. Volvox). Thus, reverse evolution from a Volvox-like alga to
Pleodorina suggested previously appears unlikely.
Cheng Q, Fowler R,
Tam LW, et al.
The
role of GlsA in the evolution of asymmetric cell division in the green alga Volvox caiteri
DEV GENES EVOL 213 (7): 328-335 JUL 2003
Abstract:
Volvox carteri, a green alga in the order Volvocales, contains two completely
differentiated cell types, small motile somatic cells and large reproductive cells
called gonidia, that are set apart from each other during embryogenesis by a
series of visibly asymmetric cell divisions. Mutational analysis has revealed a
class of genes (gonidialess, gls) that are required specifically for asymmetric
divisions in V. carteri, but that are dispensable for symmetric divisions.
Previously we cloned one of these genes, glsA, and showed that it encodes a
chaperone-like protein (G1sA) that has close orthologs in a diverse set of
eukaryotes, ranging from fungi to vertebrates and higher plants. In the present
study we set out to explore the role of glsA in the evolution of asymmetric
division in the volvocine algae by cloning and characterizing a glsA ortholog
from one of the simplest members of the group, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, which
does not undergo asymmetric divisions. This ortholog (which we have named gar1,
for glsA related) is predicted to encode a protein that is 70% identical to
G1sA overall, and that is most closely related to G1sA in the same domains that
are most highly conserved between G1sA and its other known orthologs. We report
that a gar1 transgene fully complements the glsA mutation in V. carteri, a
result that suggests that asymmetric division probably arose through the
modification of a gene whose product interacts with G1sA, but not through a
modification of glsA itself.
Grewing A, Krings
M, Galtier J, et al.
The
oldest fossil endophytic alga and its unusual habitat
SYMBIOSIS 34 (3): 215-230 2003
Abstract:
Lycophyte megaspores from the Lower Carboniferous of France sometimes contain a
colonial (volvocacean) alga as an endophyte. This peculiar plant-plant
association was briefly described more than 100 years ago and the name
Lageniastrum macrosporae introduced for the alga, but the biological
significance of the discovery was never fully appreciated. Here we present a
reappraisal of the original material, which to date provides the oldest
unequivocal fossil evidence for endophytic algae and the only example of an
alga residing in the interior of spores of vascular cryptogams.
Nedelcu AM, Michod
RE
Sex
as a response to oxidative stress: the effect of antioxidants on sexual
induction in a facultatively sexual lineage
P ROY SOC LOND B BIO 270: S136-S139 Suppl. 2 NOV 7 2003 (for pdf click here)
Abstract:
The evolution of sex is one of the long-standing unsolved problems in biology.
Although in many lineages sex is an obligatory part of the life cycle and is
associated with reproduction, in prokaryotes and many lower eukaryotes, sex is
facultative, occurs in response to stress and often involves the formation of a
stress-resistant dormant form. The proximate and ultimate causes of the
connection between stress and sex in facultatively sexual lineages are unclear.
Because most forms of stress result in the overproduction of cellular reactive
oxygen species (ROS), we address the hypothesis that this connection involves
ROS and possibly reflects the ancestral role of sex as an adaptive response to
the damaging effects of stress-induced ROS (i.e. oxidative stress) . Here, we report
that two antioxidants inhibit sexual induction in a facultatively sexual
species-the multicellular green alga, Volvox carteri.
Furthermore, the nature of the sex response and the effect of an iron chelator
on sexual induction are consistent with sex being a response to the
DNA-damaging effects of ROS. In addition, we present preliminary data to
suggest that sex, cell-cycle arrest and apoptosis are alternative responses to
increased levels of oxidative stress.
Rudel D, Sommer RJ
The
evolution of developmental mechanisms
DEV BIOL 264 (1): 15-37 DEC 1 2003
Abstract:
Over the past two to three decades, developmental biology has demonstrated that
all multicellular organisms in the animal kingdom share many of the same
molecular building blocks and many of the same regulatory genetic pathways. Yet
we still do not understand how the various organisms use these molecules and
pathways to assume all the forms we know today. Evolutionary developmental
biology tackles this problem by comparing the development of one organism to
another and comparing the genes involved and gene functions to understand what
makes one organism different from another. In this review, we revisit a set of
seven concepts defined by Lewis Wolpert (fate maps, asymmetric division.
induction, competence, positional information, determination, and lateral
inhibition) that describe the characters of many developmental systems and
supplement them with three additional concepts (developmental genomics, genetic
redundancy, and genetic networks). We will discuss examples of comparative
developmental studies where these concepts have guided observations on the
advent of a developmental novelty. Finally, we identify a set of evolutionary
frameworks, such as developmental constraints, cooption, duplication, parallel
and convergent evolution, and homoplasy, to adequately describe the
evolutionary properties of developmental systems. (C) 2003 Elsevier Inc. All
rights reserved.
Kato-Minoura
T, Okumura M, Hirono M, et al.
A
novel family of unconventional actins in volvocalean algae
J MOL EVOL 57 (5): 555-561 NOV 2003
Abstract:
The unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii has two actin genes, one
encoding a conventional actin (90% amino acid identity with mammalian actin),
the other a highly divergent actin (64% identity) named novel actin-like
protein (NAP). To see whether the presence of conventional and unconventional
actins in a single organism is unique to C. reinhardtii, we searched for
genomic sequences related to the NAP sequence in several other species of
volvocalean algae. Here we show that Chlamydomonas moewusii and Volvox carteri
also have, in addition to a conventional actin, an unconventional actin similar
to the C. reinhardtii NAP. Analyses of the deduced protein sequences indicated
that the NAP homologues form a distinct group derived from conventional actin.
Golstein P, Aubry
L, Levraud JP
Cell-death
alternative model organisms: Why and which?
NAT REV MOL CELL BIO 4 (10): 798-807 OCT 2003
Abstract:
Classical model organisms have helped greatly in our understanding of cell
death but, at the same time, night have constrained it. The use of other,
nor-classical model organisms from all biological kingdoms could reveal
undetected molecular pathways and better-defined morphological types of cell
death. Here we discuss what is known and what might be learned from these
alternative model systems.
Ohta H, Suzuki T,
Ueno M, et al.
Extrinsic
proteins of photosystem II - An intermediate member of the PsbQ protein family
in red algal PSII
EUR J BIOCHEM 270 (20): 4156-4163 OCT 2003
Abstract:
The oxygen-evolving photosystem II (PS II) complex of red algae contains four
extrinsic proteins of 12 kDa, 20 kDa, 33 kDa and cyt c-550, among which the 20
kDa protein is unique in that it is not found in other organisms. We cloned the
gene for the 20-kDa protein from a red alga Cyanidium caldarium. The gene
consists of a leader sequence which can be divided into two parts: one for
transfer across the plastid envelope and the other for transfer into thylakoid
lumen, indicating that the gene is encoded by the nuclear genome. The sequence
of the mature 20-kDa protein has low but significant homology with the
extrinsic 17-kDa (PsbQ) protein of PS II from green algae Volvox
Carteri and Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, as well as the PsbQ protein of higher
plants and PsbQ-like protein from cyanobacteria. Cross-reconstitution
experiments with combinations of the extrinsic proteins and PS Its from the red alga Cy. caldarium
and green alga Ch.
reinhardtii showed that the extrinsic 20-kDa protein was functional in place of
the green algal 17-kDa protein on binding to the green algal PS II and
restoration of oxygen evolution. From these results, we conclude that the
20-kDa protein is the ancestral form of the extrinsic 17-kDa protein in green
algal and higher plant PS IIs. This provides an important clue to the evolution
of the oxygen-evolving complex from prokaryotic cyanobacteria to eukaryotic
higher plants. The gene coding for the extrinsic 20-kDa protein was named psbQ'
(prime).
Cole DG, Reedy MV
Algal
morphogenesis: How Volvox turns
itself inside-out
CURR BIOL 13 (19): R770-R772 SEP 30 2003
Abstract:
During its development, the multicellular green alga Volvox
undergoes inversion, in which spherical embryos turn their multicellular sheet
completely inside out. A mutant analysis has revealed that a novel kinesin
motor protein is essential for completing this process.
Voigt J, Frank R
14-3-3
proteins are constituents of the insoluble glycoprotein framework of the
Chlamydomonas cell wall
PLANT CELL 15 (6): 1399-1413 JUN 2003
Abstract:
The cell wall of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii consists
predominantly of Hyp-rich glycoproteins, which also occur in the extracellular
matrix of multicellular green algae and higher plants. In addition to the
Hyp-rich polypeptides, the insoluble glycoprotein framework of the
Chlamydomonas cell wall contains minor amounts of 14-3-3 proteins, as
revealed by immunochemical studies and mass spectroscopic analysis of tryptic
peptides. Polypeptides immunologically related to the 14-3-3 proteins also
were found in the culture medium of Chlamydomonas. The levels of two of these
14-3-3-related polypeptides were decreased in the culture medium of the
wall-deficient mutant cw-15. These findings indicate that 14-3-3
proteins are involved in the cross-linking of Hyp-rich glycoproteins in the
Chlamydomonas cell wall.
Michod RE, Nedelcu
AM
On
the reorganization of fitness during evolutionary transitions in individuality
INTEGR COMP BIOL 43 (1): 64-73 FEB 2003 (for pdf click here)
Abstract:
The basic problem in an evolutionary transition is to understand how a group of
individuals becomes a new kind of individual, possessing the property of
heritable variation in fitness at the new level of organization. During an
evolutionary transition, for example, from single cells to multicellular
organisms, the new higher-level evolutionary unit (multicellular organism)
gains its emergent properties by virtue of the interactions among lower-level
units (cells). We see the formation of cooperative interactions among
lower-level units as a necessary step in evolutionary transitions; only
cooperation transfers fitness from lower levels (costs to group members) to
higher levels (benefits to the group). As cooperation creates new levels of
fitness, it creates the opportunity for conflict between levels as deleterious
mutants arise and spread within the group. Fundamental to the emergence of a
new higher-level unit is the mediation of conflict among lower-level units in
favor of the higher-level unit. The acquisition of heritable variation in
fitness at the new level, via conflict mediation, requires the reorganization
of the basic components of fitness (survival and reproduction) and
life-properties (such as immortality and totipotency) as well as the co-option
of lower-level processes for new functions at the higher level. The way in
which the conflicts associated with the transition in individuality have been
mediated, and fitness and general life-traits have been re-organized, can
influence the potential for further evolution (i.e., evolvability) of the newly
emerged evolutionary individual. We use the volvocalean green algal group as a model-system
to understand evolutionary transitions in individuality and to apply and test
the theoretical principles presented above. Lastly, we discuss how the
different notions of individuality stem from the basic properties of fitness in
a multilevel selection context.
Kirk DL
Seeking
the ultimate and proximate causes of Volvox
multicellularity and cellular differentiation
INTEGR COMP BIOL 43 (2): 247-253 APR 2003
Abstract:
Volvox and its relatives
provide an exceptional model for integrative studies of the evolution of
multicellularity and cellular differentiation. The volvocine algae range in
complexity from unicellular Chlamydomonas through several colonial genera with
a single cell type, to multicellular Volvox with its germsoma
division of labor. Within the monophyletic family Volvocaceae, several species
of Volvox have evolved independently in different lineages,
the ultimate cause presumably being the advantage that large size and cellular
differentiation provide in competing for limiting resources such as
phosphorous. The proximate causes of this type of evolutionary transition are
being studied in V carteri. All volvocine algae except Volvox exhibit biphasic development: cells grow during a motile, biflagellate
phase, then they lose motility and divide repeatedly
during the reproductive phase. In V carteri three kinds of genes transform this
ancestral biphasic program into a dichotomous one that generates non-motile
reproductive cells and biflagellate somatic cells with no reproductive
potential: first the gls genes act in early embryos to cause asymmetric
division and production of large-small sister-cell pairs; then lag genes act in
the large cells to repress the biflagellate half of the ancestral program,
while regA acts in the small cells to repress the reproductive half of the
program. Molecular-genetic analysis of these genes is progressing, as will be
illustrated with regA, which encodes a transcription factor that acts in
somatic cells to repress nuclear genes encoding chloroplast proteins.
Repression of chloroplast biogenesis prevents these obligately photoautotrophic
cells from growing, and since they cannot grow, they cannot reproduce.
Mori T, Kuroiwa H,
Higashiyama T, et al.
Identification
of higher plant GlsA, a putative morphogenesis factor of gametic cells
BIOCHEM BIOPH RES CO 306 (2): 564-569 JUN 27 2003
Abstract:
GlsA has been identified in an asexual-reproductive-cell (gonidia)-deficient
mutant of Volvox as a chaperone-like protein essential for gonidia
production. In this study, we isolated an angiosperm glsA (LlglsA) gene expressed
during Lilium longiflorum pollen development. Immunoblot analyses showed that
the strong LlGlsA expression occurred in the generative cell and its pattern
during pollen development corresponded to that of alpha-tubulin. Morphological
analyses succeeded in visualizing the dispersion of the strong LlGlsA signal in
developing generative cells. In addition, multiple-immunofluorescence staining
of LIGNA and alpha-tubulin revealed that some of the dot-like LlGlsA signals
were co-localized with microtubule filaments. From those results, we suggest
that angiosperm GlsA functions as a chaperone modifying various structures
during male gametic cell formation. (C) 2003 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights
reserved.
Nishii I, Ogihara
S, Kirk DL
A
kinesin, InvA, plays an essential role in Volvox morphogenesis
CELL 113 (6): 743-753 JUN 13 2003
Abstract:
In Volvox
carted adults, reproductive cells called gonidia are enclosed within a
spherical monolayer of biflagellate somatic cells. Embryos must
"invert" (turn inside out) to achieve this configuration, however,
because at the end of cleavage the gonidia are on the outside and the flagellar
ends of all somatic cells point inward. Generation of a bend region adequate to
turn the embryo inside out involves a dramatic change in cell shape, plus cell
movements. Here, we cloned a gene called invA that is essential for inversion
and found that it codes for a kinesin localized in the cytoplasmic bridges that
link all cells to their neighbors. In invA null mutants, cells change shape
normally, but are unable to move relative to the cytoplasmic bridges. A normal
bend region cannot be formed and inversion stops. We conclude that the InvA
kinesin provides the motile force that normally drives inversion to completion.
Bonner JT
On
the origin of differentiation
J BIOSCIENCES 28 (4): 523-528 JUN 2003
Abstract:
Following the origin of multicellularity in many groups of primitive organisms
there evolved more than one cell type. It has been assumed that this early
differentiation is related to size - the larger the organism the more cell types.
Here two very different kinds of organisms are considered: the volvocine algae
that become multicellular by growth, and the cellular
slime moulds that become multicellular by aggregation. In both cases there are
species that have only one cell type and others that have two. It has been
possible to show that there is a perfect correlation with size: the forms with
two cell types are significantly larger-than those with one. Also in both
groups there are forms of intermediate size that will vary from one to two cell
types depending on the size of the individuals, suggesting a form of quorum
sensing. These observations reinforce the view that size plays a critical role
in influencing the degree of differentiation.
Michod RE, Nedelcu
AM, Roze D
Cooperation and conflict in the evolution of individuality IV.
Conflict mediation and evolvability in Volvox
carteri
BIOSYSTEMS 69 (2-3): 95-114 MAY 2003 (for pdf click here)
Abstract:
The continued well being of evolutionary individuals (units of selection and
evolution) depends upon their evolvability, that is their capacity to generate
and evolve adaptations at their level of organization, as well as their longer
term capacity for diversifying into more complex evolutionary forms. During a
transition from a lower- to higher-level individual, such as the transition
between unicellular and multicellular organisms, the evolvability of the
lower-level (cells) must be restricted, while the evolvability of the new
higher-level unit (multicellular organism) must be enhanced. For these reasons,
understanding the factors leading to an evolutionary transition should help us
to understand the factors underlying the emergence of evolvability of a new
evolutionary unit. Cooperation among lower-level units is fundamental to the
origin of new functions in the higher-level unit. Cooperation can produce a new
more complex evolutionary unit, with the requisite properties of heritable
fitness variations, because cooperation trades fitness from a lower-level (the
costs of cooperation) to the higher-level (the benefits for the group). For
this reason, the evolution of cooperative interactions helps us to understand
the origin of new and higher-levels of fitness and organization. As cooperation
creates a new level of fitness, it also creates the opportunity for conflict
between levels of selection, as deleterious mutants with differing effects at
the two levels arise and spread. This conflict can interfere with the
evolvability of the higher-level unit, since the lower and higher-levels of
selection will often "disagree" on what adaptations are most
beneficial to their respective interests. Mediation of this conflict is
essential to the emergence of the new evolutionary unit and to its continued
evolvability. As an example, we consider the transition from unicellular to
multicellular organisms and study the evolution of an early-sequestered germ-line
in terms of its role in mediating conflict between the two levels of selection,
the cell and the cell group. We apply our theoretical framework to the
evolution of germ/soma differentiation in the green algal group Volvocales. In
the most complex member of the group, Volvox carteri, the
potential conflicts among lower-level cells as to the "right" to
reproduce the higher-level individual (i.e. the colony) have been mediated by
restricting immortality and totipotency to the germ-line. However, this mediation,
and the evolution of an early segregated germ-line, was achieved by suppressing
mitotic and differentiation capabilities in all post-embryonic cells. By
handicapping the soma in this way, individuality is ensured, but the solution
has affected the long-term evolvability of this lineage. We think that although
conflict mediation is pivotal to the emergence of individuality at the
higher-level, the way in which the mediation is achieved can greatly affect the
longer-term evolvability of the lineage. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science Ireland Ltd.
All rights reserved.
Laflamme M, Lee RW
Mitochondrial
genome conformation among CW-group chlorophycean algae
J PHYCOL 39 (1): 213-220 FEB 2003
Abstract:
Most green algal taxa have circular-mapping mitochondrial genomes, whereas some
have linear genome- or subgenomic-sized mitochondrial DNAs (mtDNA). It is not
clear, however, if the circular-mapping genomes represent genome-sized circular
molecules, if such circular molecules and the linear forms are the predominant
in vivo mtDNA structures, or if the linear forms arose only once or multiple
times among extant green algal lineages. We therefore examined the DNA components
detected with homologous mtDNA probes after pulsed-field gel electrophoresis of
total cellular DNA from the chlorophycean basal bodies displaced
clockwise(CW)-group taxa Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Chlamydomonas moewusii.
For C. reinhardtii , the 15.8-kb linear mtDNA was the
only DNA component detected, and there was no evidence of circular or large
linear precursors of this DNA. In the case of C. moewusii , which is known to
have a circular-mapping 22.9-kb mitochondrial genome, three DNA components were
detected; these appeared to be circular (relaxed and supercoiled) and
genome-sized linear DNA molecules, the latter of which likely resulted from
random double-strand breaks in the circular forms during DNA isolation. In
further studies, DNA from additional CW-group taxa was examined using
conventional gel electrophoresis and DNA-filter blot analysis with C.
reinhardtii and C. moewusii mtDNA probes. We conclude that all taxa from the
"Volvox
clade" (sensu Nakayama et al. 1996) of the CW-group have genome- or
subgenomic-sized linear mtDNAs as their predominant mtDNA form and that these
arose from a genome-sized circular form in an ancestor that existed near the
base of this clade.
Hallmann A
Extracellular
matrix and sex-inducing pheromone in Volvox
INT REV CYTOL 227: 131-+ 2003
Schmitt R,
Sumper M
Developmental
biology - How to turn inside out
NATURE 424 (6948): 499-500 JUL 31 2003
2002
Desnitski AG
Dormant
stages of the green flagellate in Volvox in a natural
habitat
RUSSIAN
JURNAL OF DEVELOPMENTAL BIOLOGY 33(2): 107-109; 2002 (for pdf click here)
Coleman AW
Comparison
of Eudorina/Pleodorina ITS sequences of isolates from nature with those from
experimental hybrids
AM J BOT 89 (9): 1523-1530 SEP 2002
Abstract:
Internal transcribed spacer (ITS) regions of nuclear ribosomal repeats were
compared among 50 Eudorina and Pleodorina isolates and two Volvox species known to clade with Eudorina species. Of the six major subclades
found, four containing Eudorina and Pleodorina illinoisensis isolates, one
containing Eudorina and Pleodorina indica, and one containing Volvox gigas and V. powersii, the basal branching order remains uncertain, but
the positioning of isolates known to mate was always as nearest neighbors on
the terminal branches of the tree. Four hybrid clones from a cross of E.
elegans with P. illinoisensis, known from chromosome counts to be products of
the failure of meiosis at zygote germination, contain both parental ITS repeat
regions, as expected. However, they have in addition both crossover and other
variant ITS cistrons among their many repeats of ITS. Such variation is limited
to terminal regions of helices, as recognized from knowledge of RNA transcript
secondary structure. Proper alignment then utilizes all of the nucleotide
positions; the hybrid variants appear in positions intermediate between their
parents in the tree. In fact, such variants seem to be hallmarks of recent
hybridization events, since they were not found in any of the other 50
isolates.
Duncan L,
Bouckaert K, Yeh F, et al.
Kangaroo,
a mobile element from Volvox
carteri, is a member of a newly recognized third class of retrotransposons
GENETICS 162 (4): 1617-1630 DEC 2002
Abstract:
Retrotransposons play an important role in the evolution of genomic structure
and function. Here we report on the characterization of a novel retrotransposon
called kangaroo front the multicellular green alga, Volvox carteri. kangaroo elements are highly mobile
and their expression is developmentally regulated. The), probably integrate via
double-stranded, closed-circle DNA intermediates through the action of an
encoded recombinase related to the X-site-specific integrase. Phylogenetic
analysis indicates that kangaroo elements are closely related to other
unorthodox retrotransposons including PAT (from a nematode), DIRS-1 (from
Dictyostelium), and DrDIRS1 (from zebrafish). PAT and kangaroo both contain
split direct repeat (SDR) termini, and here we show that DIRS-1 and DrDIRS1
elements contain terminal features structurally related to SDRs. Thus, these
mobile elements appear to define a third class of retrotransposons (the DIRS1
group) that are unified by common structural features, genes, and integration
mechanisms, all of which differ from those of LTR and conventional non-LTR
retrotransposons.
Berthold P,
Schmitt R, Mages W
An
engineered Streptomyces hygroscopicus aph 7" gene mediates dominant
resistance against hygromycin B in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
PROTIST 153 (4): 401-412 DEC 2002
Abstract:
We have developed a positively selectable marker for the green alga
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii using the Streptomyces hygroscopicus aminoglycoside
phosphotransferase gene (aph7"). Its expression is controlled by C.
reinhardtii regulatory elements, namely, the beta2-tubulin gene promoter in
combination with the first intron and the 3' untranslated region of the small
subunit of ribulose bisphosphate carboxylase, rbcS2. C. reinhardtii cell-wall
deficient and wild-type strains were transformed at rates up to 5 x 10(-5) with
two constructs, pHyg3 and pHyg4 (intron-less). Transformants selected on plates
with 10 mug/ml hygromycin B exhibited diverse levels of resistance of up to 200
mug/ml that were stably maintained for at least seven months; they contained
two to five copies of the construct integrated in their genomes. Transcription
of the chimeric aph7" gene, correct splicing of the rbcS2 intron, and polyadenylation of the transcripts have been
verified by sequencing of RT-PCR products. Average co-transformation rates
using pHyg3 and a second selectable plasmid were about 11%. This advocates the
hygromycin-resistance plasmid, pHyg3, as a new versatile tool for the
transformation of a broad range of C. reinhardtii strains without the sustained
need for using auxotrophic mutants as recipients.
Gradmann D,
Ehlenbeck S, Hegemann P
Modeling
light-induced currents in the eye of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
J MEMBRANE BIOL 189 (2): 93-104 SEP 15 2002
Abstract:
Rhodopsin-mediated electrical events in green algae have been recorded in the
past from the eyes of numerous micro-algae like Haematococcus pluvialis, Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii and Volvox carteri. However, the
electrical data gathered by suction-pipette techniques could be interpreted in
qualitative terms only. Here we present two models that allow a quantitative
analysis of such results: First, an electrical analog circuit for the cell in
suction pipette configuration is established. Applying this model to
experimental data from unilluminated cells of C. reinhardtii yields a membrane
conductance of about 3 Sm-2. Furthermore, an analog circuit allows the determination
of the photocurrent fraction that is recorded under experimental conditions.
Second, a reaction scheme of a rhodopsin-type photocycle with an early Ca2+
conductance and a later H+ conductance is presented. The combination of both
models provides good fits to light-induced currents recorded from C.
reinhardtii. Finally, it allowed the calculation of the impact of each model
parameter on the time courses of observable photocurrent and of inferred
transmembrane voltage. The reduction of the flash-to-peak
times at increasing. light intensities are
explained by superposition of two kinetically distinct rhodopsins and by
assuming that the Ca2+-conducting state decays faster at more positive membrane
voltages.
Saliu JK
The
diet of Brycinus nurse (Pisces : Characidae) from Asa
Reservoir, Ilorin, Nigeria
REV BIOL TROP 50 (1): 239-243 MAR 2002
Abstract:
From November 1991 to October 1993, 980 specimens of the characid Brycinus
nurse were collected from Asa reservoir to examine its diet. The diet was
analyzed using the frequency of occurrence, numerical and gravimetric methods.
Two hundred and sixty nine (27.45%) of the stomachs examined were empty. The fish
was an omnivore feeding extensively on a wide array of plant and animal food
items. These consisted of 9 families, 10 genera and 10 species. The most
extensively consumed plant food item was aquatic plant parts which occurred in
63.88% of the stomachs, and accounted for 6.06% by number and 12.10% by weight
while the ephemeropteran, Povilla adusta was the most dominant animal food
item, occurring in 50.92% of the stomachs, and accounting for 11.98% by number
and 11.86% by weight. Conversely, the least consumed plant food item was Volvox occurring in 4.49% of the stomachs and accounting for 0.18% by number
and 0.35% by weight, while the fish Barbus sp. was the least consumed animal
food item occurring in 0.51% of the stomachs, accounting for 0.03% by number and
1.62% by weight. New food items not previously recorded such as a watermite,
Aspatharia sinuata and Barbus callipterus were found in the stomach contents.
The nonspecific feeding regime of the fish and its ability to utilize different
food items effectively was what accounted for the prominence and wide
distribution of the fish in the lake.
Heitzer M,
Hallmann A
An
extracellular matrix-localized metalloproteinase with an exceptional QEXXH
metal binding site prefers copper for catalytic activity
J BIOL CHEM 277 (31): 28280-28286 AUG 2 2002
Abstract:
The extracellular matrix (ECM) of the simple multicellular organism Volvox contains many region-specific morphological elements and mediates a
variety of developmental and physiological responses by modification of its
components. The fact that >95% of the mature organism is ECM makes Volvox suitable as a model system for ECM investigations. VMPs are a family of Volvox genes that are homologous to zinc-dependent matrix metalloproteinases
(MMPs). Here we describe the identification and purification of the first VMP
protein, VMP3. The 470-kDa VMP3 glycoprotein is localized within the ECM, and
its biosynthesis is induced by the sex pheromone. The metal binding motif of
VMP3 is QEXXH, not HEXXH as known for 1300 other metalloproteinases. VMP3 shows
proteinase activity and is inhibited by EDTA or the MMP inhibitor GM 6001, but
in contrast to all known proteinases, VMP3 clearly prefers copper for activity
rather than zinc. The exchange from Q to H within the QEXXH motif abolishes its
copper preference. The unique properties of VMP3 suggest a novel type of
metalloproteinase.
Nozaki H,
Takahara M, Nakazawa A, et al.
Evolution
of rbcL group IA introns and intron open reading frames within the colonial
Volvocales (Chlorophyceae)
MOL PHYLOGENET EVOL 23 (3): 326-338 JUN 2002
Abstract:
Mobile group I introns sometimes contain an open reading frame (ORE) possibly
encoding a site-specific DNA endonuclease. However, previous phylogenetic
studies have not clearly deduced the evolutionary roles of the group I intron
ORFs. In this paper, we examined the phylogeny of group IA2 introns inserted in
the position identical to that of the chloroplast-encoded rbcL coding region
(rbcL-462 introns) and their ORFs from 13 strains of five genera (Volvox, Pleodorina, Volvulina, Astrephomene, and Gonium) of the colonial
Volvocales (Chlorophyceae) and a related unicellular green alga, Vitreochlamys.
The rbcL-462 introns contained an intact or degenerate ORE of various sizes
except for the Gonium multicoccum rbcL-462 intron. Partial amino acid sequences
of some rbcL-462 intron ORFs exhibited possible homology to the
endo/excinuclease amino acid terminal domain. The distribution of the rbcL-462
introns is sporadic in the phylogenetic trees of the colonial Volvocales based
on the five chloroplast exon sequences (6021 bp). Phylogenetic analyses of the
conserved intron sequences resolved that the G. multicoccum rbcL-462 intron had
a phylogenetic position separate from those of other colonial volvocalean
rbcL-462 introns, indicating the recent horizontal transmission of the intron
in the G. multicoccum lineage. However, the combined data set from conserved
intron sequences and ORFs from most of the rbcL-462 introns resolved robust
phylogenetic relationships of the introns that were consistent with those of
the host organisms. Therefore, most of the extant rbcL-462 introns may have
been vertically inherited from the common ancestor of their host organisms,
whereas such introns may have been lost in other lineages during evolution of
the colonial Volvocales. In addition, apparently higher synonymous
substitutions than nonsynonymous substitutions in the rbcL-462 intron ORFs
indicated that the ORFs might evolve under functional constraint, which could
result in homing of the rbcL-462 intron in cases of spontaneous intron loss. On
the other hand, the presence of intact to largely degenerate ORFs of the
rbcL-462 introns within the three isolates of Gonium viridistellatum and the
rare occurrence of the ORF-lacking rbcL-462 intron suggested that the ORF's
might degenerate to result in the spontaneous intron loss during a very short
evolutionary time following the loss of the ORF function. Thus, the sporadic
distribution of the rbcL-462 introns within the colonial Volvocales can be
largely explained by an equilibrium between
maintenance of the introns by the intron ORF and spontaneous loss of introns
when the introns do not have a functional ORE. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science (USA). All rights
reserved.
Aono N,
Shimizu T, Inoue T, et al.
Palindromic
repetitive elements in the mitochondrial genome of Volvox
FEBS LETT 521 (1-3): 95-99 JUN 19 2002
Abstract:
Group I introns were found in the cob and cox I genes of Volvox carteri. These introns contain tandem arrays of short palindromic
sequences that are related to each other. Inspection of other regions in the
mtDNA revealed that similar palindromic repetitive sequences are dispersed in
the non-protein coding regions of the mitochondrial genome. Analysis of the
group I intron in the cob gene of another member of Volvocaceae, Volvox aureus, has shown that its sequence is highly homologous to its
counterpart in V. carteri with the exception of a cluster of palindromic
sequences not found in V. carteri. This indicates that the palindromic clusters
were inserted into the introns after divergence of the two species, presumably
due to frequent insertions of the palindromic elements during evolution of the
Volvocaceae. Possible involvement of the palindromic repetitive elements in the
molecular evolution of functional RNAs is discussed. (C) 2002
Published by Elsevier Science B.V. on behalf of the Federation of European
Biochemical Societies.
Ender F, Godl K, Wenzl S, et al.
Evidence
for autocatalytic cross-linking of hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins during
extracellular matrix assembly in volvox
PLANT CELL 14 (5): 1147-1160 MAY 2002
Abstract:
The alga Volvox carteri is one of the simplest multicellular
organisms, yet it has a surprisingly complex extracellular matrix (ECM), making
Volvox suitable as a model system in which to study ECM self-assembly. Here, we
analyze the primary structures and post-translational modifications of two main
ECM components synthesized in response to sexual induction as well as wounding.
These proteins are members of the pherophorin family with as yet unknown
properties. They contain polyhydroxyproline spacers as long as 500 and 2750
residues. Even the highly purified proteins retain the capacity to
self-assemble and cross-link, producing an insoluble fibrous network in an
apparently autocatalytic reaction. This pherophorin-based network is located within
the deep zone of the ECM. A molecular genetic search for additional members of
the pherophorin family indicates that at least nine different pherophorin
species can be expected to serve as precursors for ECM substructures.
Therefore, the highly diversified members of the pherophorin family represent
region-specific morphological building blocks for ECM assembly and
cross-linking.
Shimizu T,
Inoue T, Shiraishi H
Cloning
and characterization of novel extensin-like cDNAs that are expressed during
late somatic cell phase in the green alga Volvox carteri
GENE 284 (1-2): 179-187 FEB 6 2002
Abstract:
Asexual individuals of the green alga Volvox carteri consist
of two cell types, somatic and reproductive cells. The somatic cells are
terminally differentiated post-mitotic cells which undergo gradual senescence
leading to cell death in every generation. To understand the gene expression
programs associated with senescence of somatic cells, we cloned two cDNAs, LSG1
and LSG2, that are preferentially expressed during
this late developmental stage. These two cDNAs were deduced to encode Pro-rich
motifs characteristic of extensin proteins that are components of the
extracellular in matrix. LSG1 also resembled genes encoding plant
pathogenesis-related protein 1 (PR-1), while LSG2 showed similarities with
genes encoding matrix metalloproteinases, including a gamete lytic enzyme of
Chlamydomonas. We also found that S9, one of the late somatic cDNAs previously
cloned by Tam and Kirk (Dev. Biol. 145 (1991) 51), was deduced to encode a
protein with a composition similar to LSG2. The expression of PR-1 and a
matrix-metalloproteinase-encoding gene has been shown to be induced during
senescence in higher plants. These results indicate that some of the late
somatic genes in V. carteri are related to the senescence-associated genes in
higher plants. (C) 2002 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Miller SM
Taming
the fierce roller: an "enhanced" understanding of cellular
differentiation in Volvox
BIOESSAYS 24 (1): 3-7 JAN 2002
Abstract:
Few organisms offer a better opportunity to explore the mechanisms of cellular
differentiation, and their origins, than Volvox. Volvox consists of just two cell types, germ and soma, and is the most complex
member of a family of green algae that includes unicellular and multicellular
relatives. At the heart of the cell-fate determination program of Volvox carted is the regA gene, which encodes a putative transcriptional
repressor that prevents somatic cells from expressing reproductive functions.
Stark et al.((1)) have dissected the regA gene to
determine how its expression is restricted to somatic cells. Their results
suggest that regrA expression is controlled by multiple enhancers, the most
important of which prevents transcription in reproductive cells. While these
findings shed light on Volvox development, they
also raise a new set of questions about the mechanisms that control the
germ-soma dichotomy in this organism. (C) 2002 John Wiley
Sons, Inc.
Nishii I,
Kirk DL
A
kinesin-like protein encoding gene, invA, is required for the cellular
movements that drive inversion of Volvox
embryos
MOL BIOL CELL 13: 834 NOV 2002
Stark K,
Schmitt R
Genetic
control of germ-soma differentiation in Volvox
carteri
PROTIST 153 (2): 99-107 JUN 2002
2001
Kirk DL,
Nishii I
Volvox carteri as a model for studying
the genetic and cytological control of morphogenesis
DEV GROWTH DIFFER 43 (6): 621-631 DEC 2001
Abstract:
The green alga Volvox carteri has a very simple and
regular adult form that arises through a short sequence of well-defined
morphogenetic steps. A mature gonidium (asexual reproductive cell) initiates a
stereotyped sequence of rapid cleavage divisions that will produce all of the
cells found later in an adult. A predictable subset of these
divisions are asymmetric and result in production of a small set of germ
cells in a precise spatial pattern. Throughout cleavage, all intracellular
components are held in predictable spatial relationships by a cytoskeleton of
unusually regular structure, while neighboring cells are also held in fixed
spatial relationships by an extensive network of cytoplasmic bridges that form
as a result of incomplete cytokinesis. As a result of these two orienting
mechanisms combined, dividing cells are arranged around the anterior-posterior
axis of the embryo with precise rotational symmetry. These relationships are
maintained by the cytoplasmic bridge system when the embryo that was inside out
at the end of cleavage turns right-side out in the gastrulation-like process of
inversion. Inversion is driven by a cytoskeleton-mediated sequence of cell
shape changes, cellular movements and coordinated contraction. Then, by the
time the cytoplasmic bridges begin to break down shortly after inversion, a
preliminary framework of extracellular matrix (ECM) has been formed. The ECM
traps the cells and holds them in the rotational relationships that were
established during cleavage, and that must be maintained in order for the adult
to be able to swim. Transposon tagging is now being used to clone and
characterize the genes regulating these morphogenetic processes.
Sineshchekov
OA, Govorunova EG
Rhodopsin
receptors of phototaxis in green flagellate algae
BIOCHEMISTRY-MOSCOW+ 66 (11): 1300-1310 NOV 2001
Abstract:
Green flagellate algae are capable of the active adjustment of their swimming
path according to the light direction (phototaxis). This direction is detected
by a special photoreceptor apparatus consisting of the photoreceptor membrane
and eyespot. Receptor photoexcitation in green flagellates triggers a cascade
of rapid electrical events in the cell membrane which plays a crucial role in
the signal transduction chain of phototaxis and the photophobic response. The
photoreceptor current is the earliest so far detectable process in this
cascade. Measurement of the photoreceptor current is at present the most
suitable approach to investigation of the photoreceptor pigment in green flagellate
algae, since a low receptor concentration in the cell makes application of
optical and biochemical methods so far impossible. A set of physiological
evidences shows that the phototaxis receptor in green flagellate algae is a
unique rhodopsin-type protein. It shares common chromophore properties with
retinal proteins from archaea. However, the involvement of photoelectric
processes in the signal transduction chain relates it to animal visual
rhodopsins. The presence of some enzymatic components of the animal visual
cascade in isolated eyespot preparations might also point to this relation. A
retinal-binding protein has been identified in such preparations, the amino
acid sequence of which shows a certain homology to sequences of animal visual
rhodopsins. However, potential function of this protein as the phototaxis
receptor has been questioned in recent time.
Kaiser D
Building
a multicellular organism
ANNU REV GENET 35: 103-123 2001
Abstract:
Multicellular organisms appear to have arisen from unicells numerous times.
Multicellular cyanobacteria arose early in the history of life on Earth.
Multicellular forms have since arisen independently in each of the kingdoms and
several times in some phyla. If the step from unicellular to
multicellular life was taken early and frequently, the selective advantage of
multicellularity may be large. By comparing the properties of a
multicellular organism with those of its putative unicellular ancestor, it may
be possible to identify the selective force(s). The independent instances of
multicellularity reviewed indicate that advantages in feeding and in dispersion
are common. The capacity for signaling between cells accompanies the evolution
of multicellularity with cell differentiation.
Fuhrmann M,
Stahlberg A, Govorunova E, et al.
The
abundant retinal protein of the Chlamydomonas eye is not the photoreceptor for
phototaxis and photophobic responses
J CELL SCI 114 (21): 3857-3863 NOV 2001
Abstract:
The chlamyopsin gene (cop) encodes the most abundant eyespot protein in the
unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. This opsin-related protein
(COP) binds retinal and was thought to be the photoreceptor controlling
photomovement responses via a set of photoreceptor currents. Unfortunately,
opsin-deficient mutants are not available and targeted disruption of non-selectable
nuclear genes is not yet possible in any green alga. Here we show that
intron-containing gene fragments directly linked to their intron-less antisense
counterpart provide efficient post-transcriptional gene silencing (PTGS) in C.
reinhardtii, thus allowing an efficient reduction of a specific gene product in
a green alga. In opsin-deprived transformants, Hash-induced photoreceptor
currents (PC) are left unchanged. Moreover, photophobic responses as studied by
motion analysis and phototaxis tested in a light-scattering assay were
indistinguishable from the responses of untransformed wild-type cells. We
conclude that phototaxis and photophobic responses in C. reinhardtii are
triggered by an as yet unidentified rhodopsin species.
Kirk DL
Germ-soma
differentiation in Volvox
DEV BIOL 238 (2): 213-223 OCT 15 2001
Abstract:
Volvox carteri is a spherical green alga with a predominantly asexual mode of
reproduction and a complete germ-soma division of labor. Its somatic cells are
specialized for motility, incapable of dividing, and pro-rammed to die when
only a few days old, whereas its gonidia (asexual reproductive cells) are
nonmotile, specialized for growth and reproduction, and potentially immortal.
When a gonidium is less than 2 days old it divides to produce a juvenile
spheroid containing all of the somatic cells and gonidia that will be present
in an adult of the next generation. The first visible step in germ-soma
differentiation is a set of asymmetric cleavage divisions in the embryo that
set apart small somatic initials from their large gonidial-initial sister
cells. Three types of genes have been found to play key roles in germ-soma specification.
First a set of gls genes act in the embryos to shift cell-division planes,
resulting in the asymmetric divisions that set apart the large-small
sister-cell pairs. Then a set of lag genes act in the large cells to prevent
somatic differentiation, while the regA gene acts in the small cells to prevent
reproductive development. An inducible transposon was used to tag and recover
some of these and other developmentally important genes. The glsA gene encodes
a chaperone-like protein that, like another chaperone that is one of its
putative binding partners, is associated with the cell division apparatus,
although how this leads to asymmetric division remains to be elucidated. The
regA gene encodes a somatic-cell-specific nuclear protein that appears to function
by repressing genes required for chloroplast biogenesis, thereby preventing
somatic cells from growing enough to reproduce. Somatic-cell-specific
expression of regA is controlled by three intronic enhancers. (C) 2001 Academic Press.
Shimizu T, Inoue T,
Shiraishi H
A
senescence-associated S-like RNase in the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri
GENE 274 (1-2): 227-235 AUG 22 2001
Abstract:
Asexual individuals of the green alga Volvox carteri consist
of only two cell types. somatic and reproductive
cells. The somatic cells are terminally differentiated, post-mitotic cells
which undergo gradual senescence leading to cell death in every generation. To
elucidate the self-degrading process of macromolecules associated with
senescence, we attempted to clone an RNase whose mRNA accumulation is increased
during senescence. The corresponding cDNA clone VRN1, encoding an S-like RNase
of V. carteri, is the first T-2/S-like RNase to be cloned from green algae.
Semi-quantitative RT-PCR analysis revealed that a relative amount of VPN1 mRNA
is more than three-fold higher in the senescent somatic cells than in young
somatic cells when the mRNA of ribosomal protein S18 is used as an internal
standard. VRN1 mRNA is not induced by phosphate starvation, indicating that its
accumulation during senescence is not due to a self-induced defect in utilizing
phosphates. Similar regulation has been reported for RNS3, which encodes the
S-like RNase that is induced in senescent leaves of Arabidopsis thaliana. These
observations imply that VRN1 may promote RNA degradation during senescence of
somatic cells in V. carteri, and that its regulation has similarity with that
of certain senescence-associated RNases in higher plants. (C) 2001 Elsevier
Science B.V. All rights reserved.
Hallmann A,
Amon P, Godl K, et al.
Transcriptional
activation by the sexual pheromone and wounding: a new gene family from Volvox encoding modular proteins with
(hydroxy)proline-rich and metalloproteinase homology
domains
PLANT J 26 (6): 583-593 JUN 2001
Abstract:
The green alga Volvox represents the simplest kind
of multicellular organism: it is composed of only two cell types, somatic and
reproductive, making it suitable as a model system. The sexual development of
males and females of Volvox carteri is triggered by a
sex-inducing pheromone at a concentration of < 10(-16) M. Early biochemical
responses to the pheromone involve structural modifications within the
extracellular matrix (ECM). By differential screenings of cDNA libraries made
from mRNAs of pheromone-treated Volvox, four novel genes
were identified that encode four closely related Volvox metalloproteinases that we use to define a new protein family, the VMPs.
The existence of several features common to matrix glycoproteins, such as
signal peptides, a (hydroxy)proline content of 12-25%, and Ser(Pro)(2-4)
repeats, suggest an extracellular localization of the VMPs within the ECM.
Synthesis of VMP cDNAs is triggered not only by the sex-inducing pheromone, but
also by wounding, and is restricted to the somatic cell type. Sequence
comparisons suggest that the VMPs are members of the MB clan of zinc-dependent
matrix metalloproteinases, although the putative zinc binding site of all VMPs
is QEXXHXXGXXH rather than HEXXHXXGXXH. The presence of glutamine instead of
histidine in the zinc binding motif suggests a novel family, or even clan, of
peptidases. Like the matrixin family of human collagenases, Volvox VMPs exhibit a modular structure: they possess a metalloproteinase
homology domain and a (hydroxy)proline-rich domain,
and one of them, VMP4, also has two additional domains. Metalloproteinases seem
to be crucial for biochemical modifications of the ECM during development or
after wounding in the lower eukaryote Volvox with only two
cell types, just as in higher organisms.
Kaczanowski
S, Jerzmanowski A
Evolutionary
correlation between linker histones and microtubular structures
J MOL EVOL 53 (1): 19-30 JUL 2001
Abstract:
Histones of the H1 group (linker histones) are abundant components of chromatin
in eukaryotes, occurring on average at one molecule per nucleosome. The recent
reports on the lack of a clear phenotypic effect of knock-out mutations as well
as overexpression of histone H1 genes in different organisms have seriously
undermined the long-held view that linker histones are essential for the basic
functions of eukaryotic cells. In an attempt to resolve the paradox of an
abundant conserved protein without a clear function, we re-examined the
molecular and phylogenetic data on linker histones to see if they could reveal
any correlation between the features of H1 and the functional or morphological
characteristics of cells or organisms. Because of an earlier demonstration that
in sea urchin the chromatin-type histone HI is also found in the flagellar
microtubules (Multigner et al. 1992), we focused on the correlation between the
features of H1 and those of microtubular structures. A phylogenetic tree based
on multiple alignment of over 100 available H1 sequences
suggests that the first divergence of the globular domain of H1 (GH1) resulted
in branching into separate types characteristic for plants/Dictyostelium and
for animals/ascomycetes, respectively. The GH1s of these two types differ by a
short region (usually 5 amino acids) placed at a specific location within the
C-terminal wing subdomain of GH1. Evolutionary analysis of the diversification
of H1 mRNA into cell-cycle-dependent (polyA(-)) and
independent (polyA(+)) forms showed a mosaic occurrence of these two forms in
plants and animals, despite the fact that the H1 proteins of plants and animals
belong to two well-distinguished groups. However, among organisms from both
animal and plant kingdom, only those with H1 mRNA of a polyA- type have
flagellated gametes. This correlation as well as the demonstration that in Volvox carteri the accumulation of polyA- mRNA of H1 occurs concurrently with
the production of new flagella (Lindauer et al. 1993), suggests a direct link
between polyA- phenotype of histone H1 mRNA and flagello-genesis.
Stark K, Kirk
DL, Schmitt R
Two
enhancers and one silencer located in the introns of regA control somatic cell
differentiation in Volvox
carteri
GENE DEV 15 (11): 1449-1460 JUN 1 2001
Abstract:
The regA gene plays a central role in germ-soma differentiation of Volvox carteri by suppressing all reproductive functions in somatic cells. Here
we show that the minimal promoter of regA consists of only 42 bp immediately
upstream of the transcription start site, and that it contains no discernible
regulatory elements. However, introns 3 and 5 are both required for regA
expression in somatic cells, and intron 7 is essential for silencing regA in
gonidia (asexual reproductive cells). A regA gene lacking intron 7 rescues the
normal phenotype of mutant somatic cells, but also results in gonidia that
reproduce only weakly and soon die out. The same phenotype is observed when a
regA gene containing intron 7 is placed under control of a constitutive
promoter, suggesting that the silencing activity of intron 7 is promoter
specific. Intron 7 is unusual in that it contains a potential ORE that is in frame
with exons 7 and 8, and some transcripts are produced in which intron 7 is
retained. However, a regulatory role for the intron 7 translation product can
be ruled out, because a construct in which intron 7 must be translated, and one
in which it cannot be translated, both result in wild-type development of both
cell types. Furthermore, intron 7 is unable to act in trans
to silence regA, but is able to exert its normal effect when placed in a
different location within the gene. Therefore, it appears that intron 7
functions in gonidia as a classical cell-type-specific and promoter-specific
enhancer, of the inhibitory type that is often referred to as a silencer.
Babinger P,
Kobl I, Mages W, et al.
A
link between DNA methylation and epigenetic silencing in transgenic Volvox carteri
NUCLEIC ACIDS RES 29 (6): 1261-1271 MAR 15 2001
Abstract:
Epigenetic silencing of foreign genes introduced into plants poses an unsolved
problem for transgenic technology. Here we have used the simple multicellular
green alga Volvox carteri as a model to analyse
the relation of DNA methylation to transgenic silencing. Volvox DNA contains on average 1.1% Ei-methylcytosine and 0.3%
N6-methyladenine, as revealed by electrospray mass spectrometry and
phosphoimaging of chromatographically separated P-32-labelled nucleotides. In
two nuclear transformants of V.carteri, produced in 1993 by biolistic
bombardment with a foreign arylsulphatase gene (C-ars), the transgene is still
expressed in one (Hill 181), but not in the other (Hill 183), after an
estimated 500-1000 generations. Each transformant clone contains multiple
intact copies of C-ars, most of them integrated into the genome as tandem
repeats. When the bisulphite genomic sequencing protocol was applied to examine
two select regions of transgenic C-ars, we found that the inactivated copies
(Hill 183) exhibited a high-level methylation (40%) of CpG dinucleotides,
whereas the active copies (Hill 181) displayed low-level (7%) CpG methylation. These are average values from 40 PCR clones
sequenced from each DNA strand in the two portions of C-ars. The observed
correlation of CpG methylation and transgene inactivation in a green alga will
be discussed in the light of transcriptional silencing.
Ferris PJ,
Woessner JP, Waffenschmidt S, et al.
Glycosylated
polyproline II rods with kinks as a structural motif in plant hydroxyproline-rich
glycoproteins
BIOCHEMISTRY-US 40 (9): 2978-2987 MAR 6 2001
Abstract:
Hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) are the major proteinaceous
components of higher plant walls and the predominant components of the cell
wall of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. The GPI protein, an HRGP of
the C. reinhardtii wall, is shown to adopt a polyproline II helical
configuration and to carry a complex array of arabinogalactoside residues, many branched, which are necessary to stabilize
the helical conformation. The deduced GP1 amino acid sequence displays two
Ser-Pro-rich domains, one with a repeating (SP), motif and the other with a
repeating (PPSPX)(x) motif. A second cloned gene a2
also carries the PPSPX repeat, defining a novel gene family in this lineage.
The SP-repeat domains of GP1 form a 100-nm shaft with a flexible kink 28 nm
from the head. The gp1 gene encodes a PPPPPRPPFPANTPM sequence at the
calculated kink position, generating the proposal that this insert interrupts
the PPII helix, with the resultant kink exposing amino acids necessary for GP1
to bind to partner molecules. It is proposed that similar kinks in the higher
plant HRGPs called extensins may play a comparable role in wall assembly.
Kirk DL
Seeking
the ultimate and proximate causes of Volvox
multicellularity
AM ZOOL 41 (6): 1493-1493 DEC 2001
Nishii I,
Kirk DL
The
invA gene of Volvox encodes a
novel kinesin that is required for inversion of the embryo.
DEV BIOL 235 (1): 115 JUL 1 2001
2000
Desnitski AG
Development
and reproduction of two species of the genus Volvox in a shallow
temporary pool
PROTISTOLOGY
1(4): 195-198; 2000 (for pdf click here)
Kirk DL
Volvox as a model system for studying
the ontogeny and phylogeny of multicellularity and cellular differentiation
J PLANT GROWTH REGUL 19 (3): 265-274 SEP 2000
Abstract:
Volvox carteri, a spherical alga with a complete division of labor between
approximately 2000 biflagellate somatic cells and 16 asexual reproductive cells
called gonidia, provides a very attractive system for analyzing how a
molecular-genetic program for cell-autonomous cellular differentiation may be
encoded within a genome. Then, when considered in combination with a group of
closely related "volvocine algae" that includes unicellular
Chlamydomonas plus a series of colonial forms of increasing cell number and
complexity, it also provides an attractive model system for analyzing how such
a program for multicellularity and cytodifferentiation may have evolved. It is
proposed that the following were some of the key steps in this evolutionary
pathway: (1) The Chlamydomonas cell wall was transformed into an extracellular
matrix (ECM) that joined sister cells into a colonial unit. (2) Larger
organisms with more abundant ECM were favored because of the role the ECM plays
in storing limiting nutrients. (3) In the V. carteri lineage the ancestral
biphasic "first biflagellate and then reproductive" pathway of development
bt came converted to a dichotomous pathway by
introduction of two kinds of cell-type-specific negative regulators: one that
blocked growth and reproduction in presumptive somatic cells and one that
blocked somatic development in presumptive gonidia. Progress has been made in
cloning and characterizing genes that are involved in setting apart the two
cell lineages of V. carteri and in subsequently controlling their dichotomous
differentiation. The strengths and weaknesses of V. carteri and its relatives
as a model system for studying the evolution of multicellularity are discussed.
Hallmann A,
Kirk DL
The
developmentally regulated ECM glycoprotein ISG plays an essential role in
organizing the ECM and orienting the cells of Volvox
J CELL SCI 113 (24): 4605-4617 DEC 2000
Abstract:
Volvox is one of the simplest multicellular organisms with only two cell types,
yet it has a surprisingly complex extracellular matrix (ECM) containing many
region-specific morphological components, making Volvox suitable as a model system for ECM investigations. ECM deposition begins
shortly after inversion, which is the process by which the embryo turns itself
right-side-out at the end of embryogenesis. It was previously shown that the
gene encoding an ECM glycoprotein called ISG is transcribed very transiently
during inversion. Here we show that the developmentally controlled ISG
accumulates at the bases of the flagella right after inversion, before any
morphologically recognizable ECM structures have yet developed. Later, ISG is
abundant in the 'flagellar hillocks' that encircle the basal ends of all
flagella, and in the adjacent 'boundary zone' that delimits the spheroid.
Transgenic Volvox were generated which express
a truncated form of ISG, These transgenics exhibit a severely disorganized ECM
within which the cells are embedded in a highly chaotic manner that precludes
motility, A synthetic version of the C-terminal decapeptide of ISG has a
similar disorganizing effect, but only when it is applied during or shortly
after inversion. We postulate that ISG plays a critical role in morphogenesis
and acts as a key organizer of ECM architecture; at the very beginning of ECM
formation ISG establishes an essential initial framework that both holds the
somatic cells in an adaptive orientation and acts as the scaffold upon which
the rest of the ECM can be properly assembled, assuring that somatic cells of
post-inversion spheroids are held in orientations and locations that makes
adaptive swimming behavior possible.
Goodwin PH,
Li J, Jin SM
Evidence
for sulfate derepression of an arylsulfatase gene of Colletotrichum
gloeosporioides f. sp malvae during infection of round-leaved mallow, Malva
pusilla
PHYSIOL MOL PLANT P 57 (4): 169-176 OCT 2000
Abstract:
An arylsulfatase gene, cgars, was cloned from Colletotrichum gloeosporioides f.
sp. malvae (Cgm), a hemibiotrophic plant pathogenic fungus that causes
anthlacnose disease of round-leaved mallow (Malva pusilla). The clone of cgars
showed high amino acid sequence identity to ass-1(+), an arylsulfatase gene of
Neurospora crassa. Arylsulfatase genes have been shown to be good reporter
genes for detecting available sulfur levels in a variety of microorganisms.
Expression of cgars was determined by relative RT-PCR, in which gars expression
levels were compared to those of actA, a constitutively expressed actin gene of
Cgm, following coamplification. In culture, expression of gars was found to be
repressed by methionine as has been demonstrated for ars-1(+). In host leaf
tissue, cgars expression was relatively higher than actA
during penetration, similar to actA during biotrophic growth and then
progressively lower than actA during necrotrophic growth. These results
show that the availability of host sulfur differs depending upon the stage of
infection. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
Nozaki H,
Misawa K, Kajita T, et al.
Origin
and evolution of the colonial Volvocales (Chlorophyceae) as inferred from
multiple, chloroplast gene sequences
MOL PHYLOGENET EVOL 17 (2): 256-268 NOV 2000
Abstract:
A combined data set of DNA sequences (6021 bp) from five protein-coding genes
of the chloroplast genome (rbcL, atpB, psaA, psaB, and psbC genes) were
analyzed for 42 strains representing 30 species of the colonial Volvocales (Volvox and its relatives) and 5 related species of green algae to deduce robust
phylogenetic relationships within the colonial green flagellates. The 4-celled
family Tetrabaenaceae was robustly resolved as the most basal group within the
colonial Volvocales. The sequence data also suggested that all five volvocacean
genera with 32 or more cells in a vegetative colony (all four of the
anisogamous/oogamous genera, Eudorina, Platydorina, Pleodorina, and Volvox, plus the isogamous genus Yamagishiella) constituted a large
monophyletic group, in which 2 Pleodorina species were positioned distally to 3
species of Volvox. Therefore, most of the
evolution of the colonial Volvocales appears to constitute a gradual progression
in colonial complexity and in types of sexual reproduction, as in the
traditional volvocine lineage hypothesis, although reverse evolution must be
considered for the origin of certain species of Pleodorina. Data presented here
also provide robust support for a monophyletic family Goniaceae consisting of
two genera: Gonium and Astrephomene. (C) 2000 Academic Press.
Sekimoto H
Intercellular
communication during sexual reproduction of Closterium (Conjugatophyceae)
J PLANT RES 113 (1111): 343-352 SEP 2000
Abstract:
Processes of intercellular communication during sexual reproduction of
conjugating green algae Closterium were reviewed. In the case of Closterium
peracerosum-strigosum-littorale complex, two sex-specific pheromones and their
receptors were involved in sexual reproduction. These pheromones were
glycoproteins and the expression of corresponding genes was critically
regulated by the sex and environmental conditions. In the case of Closterium
ehrenbergii, chemotactic and sexual cell division-inducing activities for
mating-type plus cells were detected and characterized. Although many processes
remain to be elucidated, the present results will be helpful for understanding
not only the mode of sexual reproduction in Closterium but also the variety of
intercellular communication in the plant kingdom especially during sexual
reproduction.
Kerszberg M
The
survival of slow reproducers
J THEOR BIOL 206 (1): 81-89 SEP 7 2000
Abstract:
Multicellularity, and the attendant segregation of the germ line, entails the
loss of reproductive capacity by the soma: in Volvox carteri, less
than 1 cell in 100 contributes to the next generation. However, compensatory
advantages are unlikely to be very large (Koufopanou & Bell, 1993. Proc. R.
Soc. Lond. (B) 254, 107-113). Somewhat similarly, sex implies the generation of
males, hence a dramatic reproductive slowdown (Barton & Charlesworth, 1998.
Science 281, 1986-1990); yet, a compensating (two-fold) advantage of sex has
not been found. Here, I try to evaluate the actual cost of maintaining slow
reproductive cycles, namely cycles that necessitate the production of
"dead end" units such as somatic cells or males. In a quantitative
model for the competition of individuals with different, heritable reproductive
rates, this cost turns out to be unexpectedly small, and may even sometimes
become irrelevant. The bases for this are made fairly clear: thus, when all
enjoy high fecundity (e.g. a long reproductive life) the handicap of a slower
reproduction vanishes; alternatively, a slight separation of ecological niches
may be sufficient for survival of slower but otherwise unchanged reproducers;
and finally, inherent to slow reproduction is a low rate of destabilizing
genetic change. These facts are largely independent of the formal model
details, and are supported by direct computer simulations. They give a
quantitative basis for analysing the evolution and prevalence of slow life
cycles. The implications of these findings for the evolution of
multicellularity are briefly discussed. (C) 2000 Academic
Press.
Matveev V,
Matveeva L, Jones GJ
Relative
impacts of Daphnia grazing and direct stimulation by fish on phytoplankton
abundance in mesocosm communities
FRESHWATER BIOL 44 (3): 375-385 JUL 2000
Abstract:
1. Planktivorous fish were hypothesised to influence the abundance of algal
biomass in lakes by changing zooplankton grazing, affecting zooplankton
nutrient recycling and by direct recycling of nutrients to phytoplankton. The
relative roles of direct fish effects vs. zooplankton grazing were tested in
mesocosm experiments by adding to natural communities
large grazing zooplankton (Daphnia carinata) and small planktivorous fish
(mosquitofish or juveniles of Australian golden perch).
2. The
addition of Daphnia to natural communities reduced the numbers of all
phytoplankton less than 30 mu m in size, but did not affect total biomass of
phytoplankton as large Volvox colonies predominated.
3. The
addition of Daphnia also reduced the abundance of some small (Moina, Bosmina,
Keratella) and large (adult Boeckella) zooplankton, suggesting competitive
interactions within zooplankton.
4. The
addition of mosquitofish to communities containing Daphnia further reduced the
abundance of some small zooplankton (Moina, Keratella), but increased the
numbers of Daphnia and adult Boeckella. In spite of the likely increase in
grazing due to Daphnia, the abundance of total phytoplankton and dominant alga Volvox
did not decline in the presence of mosquitofish but was maintained at a
significantly higher level than in control.
5. The
addition of juveniles of golden perch to communities containing Daphnia reduced
the abundance of small zooplankton (Moina), increased the abundance of large
zooplankton (adult Boeckella) but had no significant effect on Daphnia and
total phytoplankton abundance.
6. The
results of the present study suggest that some planktivorous fish can promote
the growth of phytoplankton in a direct way, probably by recycling nutrients,
and even in the presence of large grazers. However, the manifestation of the
direct effect of fish can vary with fish species.
Suzuki L,
Woessner JP, Uchida H, et al.
Zygote-specific
protein with hydroxyproline-rich glycoprotein domains and lectin-like domains
involved in the assembly of the cell wall of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
(Chlorophyta)
J PHYCOL 36 (3): 571-583 JUN 2000
Abstract:
The cell wall of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii zygotes, which forms rapidly after
the fusion of wall-free gametes, provides a tractable system for studying the
properties and assembly of hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins, the major
proteinaceous components of green algal and plant cell walls. We report the
cloning of the zsp2 gene and the analysis of its ZSP-2 product, a 58.9 kDa
poly-peptide that is synthesized exclusively by zygotes, The
protein contains two (SP), repeats, establishing it as a member of the cell
wall hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins family. It also contains a 4-fold
iteration of an amino acid sequence centered around cysteine residues, a
configuration found in both plant and animal lectins, Furthermore, we report
four observations on pellicle composition and production, First, cell-free
preparations of the pellicle matrix are rich in hydroxyproline, arabinose, and
galactose and contain bundles of very long fibrils, Second, glutathione blocks
pellicle formation and results in the accumulation of long fibrils in the
growth medium. Third, antibody to ZSP-8 also blocks pellicle formation, Fourth,
ZSP-2 immunolocalizes to the boundary between the outer layers of the wall
proper and the pellicle matrix. These observations are consistent with the possibility
that the Cys-rich (glutathione-sensitive) lectin-like domains of ZSP-2 may bind
to sugar residues on the long fibrils and anchor
Sumper M,
Nink J, Wenzl S
Self-assembly
and cross-linking of Volvox
extracellular matrix glycoproteins are specifically inhibited by Ellman's
reagent
EUR J BIOCHEM 267 (8): 2334-2339 APR 2000
Abstract:
A major impediment to the biochemical characterization of extracellular
matrices from algae (as well as higher plants) is the extensive covalent
cross-linking that exists in the matrix, rendering most components insoluble
and resistant to conventional extraction procedures. In the multicellular green
alga Volvox, biogenesis of the extracellular matrix (ECM) is
initiated immediately after the process of embryonic inversion. At this stage
of development, the sulfhydryl reagent 5,5'-dithio-bis(2-nitrobenzoic
acid), known as Ellman's reagent, interferes in a highly specific manner with
ECM biogenesis. Treated post-inversion embryos are no longer able to assemble
an intact ECM and consequently dissociate into a suspension of single cells.
Dissociated cells remain viable and continue to secrete ECM proteins into the
growth medium, as documented by the identification of several members of the
pherophorin family. Cross-linked ECM polymers such as sulfated surface
glycoprotein 185 remain in a soluble state. Thus, treatment with Ellman's
reagent opens a simple approach for the isolation and characterization of
otherwise inaccessible monomeric precursors.
Wittstock U,
Fischer M, Svendsen I, et al.
Cloning
and characterization of two, cDNAs encoding sulfatases in the Roman snail,
Helix pomatia
IUBMB LIFE 49 (1): 71-76 JAN 2000
Abstract:
The sulfatase from the snail Helix pomatia is widely used for analytical
applications. We have investigated the content of sulfatases in H, pomatia,
using a biochemical and a molecular approach. A 112-kDa protein from the
intestinal juice of H. pomatia comigrated with sulfatase activity when
chromatographed on Sephacryl S300 and concanavalin A-Sepharose. The N-terminal
amino acid sequence of the protein was similar to one of three sulfatase motifs
defined by sequence alignment of known sulfatases, Degenerate primers designed
from the motifs and the N-terminal amino acid sequence obtained were used to
generate PCR fragments and to isolate both a full-length and a 3'-truncated
cDNA encoding H, pomatia sulfatases, designated SULF1 and SULF2, SULF1 consists
of 503 amino acids and shows 53-55% identity to the mammalian arylsulfatase B,
The amino acid sequence deduced from the 878-bp SULF2 cDNA fragment is 55% identical
with SULF1, Both SULF1 and SULF2 contain the cysteine residue conserved in the
active site of many sulfatases, which is known to be posttranslationally
modified into formylglycine in eukaryotic sulfatases, However, the SULF1 and
SULF2 cDNAs do not code for the protein purified. This indicates the presence
of at least three sulfatase genes in H. pomatia.
Kirk DL,
Miller SM
Embryonic
polarity, asymmetric division,and cell fate
determination in Volvox.
DEV BIOL 222 (1): 24 JUN 1 2000
1999
Meissner M,
Stark K, Cresnar B, et al.
Volvox germline-specific genes that
are putative targets of RegA repression encode chloroplast proteins
CURR GENET 36 (6): 363-370 DEC 1999
Abstract:
In Volvox carteri, regA acts as a master gene to suppress all
germ cell functions in somatic cells. Its product, RegA, has features of a
transcriptional repressor. Here we report cDNA sequences representing 15
nuclear genes with properties expected of RegA targets: they are expressed
strongly in germ cells and in regA(-), but not
regA(+), somatic cells. Two of them encode polypeptides with no recognizable
features, but ten (like three previously sequenced ones) encode chloroplast
proteins of known function, and the remaining three encode putative chloroplast
proteins of unknown function. This suggests that RegA blocks reproductive
development in somatic cells by preventing chloroplast biogenesis, thereby
making it impossible for the cells to grow enough to reproduce
Ender F, Hallmann A, Amon P, et al.
Response
to the sexual pheromone and wounding in the green alga Volvox: Induction of an extracellular glycoprotein consisting
almost exclusively of hydroxyproline
J BIOL CHEM 274 (49): 35023-35028 DEC 3 1999
Abstract:
The extracellular matrix (ECM) of Volvox is modified
during development or in response to external stimuli, like the sex-inducing
pheromone. It has recently been demonstrated that a number of genes triggered
by the sex-inducing pheromone are also inducible by wounding. By differential
screening of a cDNA library, a novel gene was identified that is transcribed in
response to the pheromone. Its gene product was characterized as an ECM
glycoprotein with a striking feature: it exhibits a hydroxyproline content of
68% and therefore is an extreme member of the family of hydroxyproline-rich
glycoproteins (HRGPs), HRGPs are known as constituents
of higher plant ECMs and seem to function as structural barriers in defense
responses. The Volvox HRGP is also found to be inducible
by wounding. This indicates that the wound response scenarios of higher plants
and multicellular green algae may be evolutionary related.
Kirk DL
Evolution
of multicellularity in the volvocine algae
CURR OPIN PLANT BIOL 2 (6): 496-501 DEC 1999
Abstract:
Recent studies reveal that relationships among the volvocine algae are more
complex than was previously believed. Nevertheless, this group still appears to
provide an unrivaled opportunity to analyze an evolutionary pathway leading
from unicellularity (Chlamydomonas) to multicellularity with division of labor
(volvox). Significant progress in this regard was made in the past year when two
genes playing key roles in volvox cellular
differentiation were cloned, and clues were uncovered regarding their
mechanisms of action.
Coleman AW
Phylogenetic
analysis of "Volvocacae" for comparative genetic studies
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 96 (24): 13892-13897 NOV 23 1999
Abstract:
Sequence analysis based on multiple isolates representing essentially all
genera and species of the classic family Volvocaeae has clarified their
phylogenetic relationships. Cloned internal transcribed spacer sequences
(ITS-1. and ITS-2, flanking the 5.8S gene of the nuclear ribosomal gene
cistrons) were aligned, guided by ITS transcript secondary structural features,
and subjected to parsimony and neighbor joining distance analysis. Results
confirm the notion of a single common ancestor, and Chlamydomonas reinharditii
alone among all sequenced green unicells is most similar. interbreeding
isolates were nearest neighbors on the evolutionary tree in all cases. Some
taxa, at whatever level, prove to be clades by sequence comparisons, but others
provide striking exceptions. The morphological species Pandorina morum, known
to be widespread and diverse in mating pairs, was found to encompass all of the
isolates of the four species of Volvulina. Platydorina appears to have
originated early and not to fall within the genus Eudorina, with which it can
sometimes be confused by morphology. The four species of Pleodorina appear
variously associated with Eudorina examples. Although the species of Volvox are each clades, the genus Volvox is not The conclusions confirm and extend prior, more limited,
studies on nuclear SSU and LSU rDNA genes and plastid-encoded rbcL and atpB.
The phylogenetic tree suggests which classical taxonomic characters are most
misleading and provides a framework for molecular studies of the cell
cycle-related and other alterations that have engendered diversity in both
vegetative and sexual colony patterns in this classical family.
Funke RP,
Kovar JL, Logsdon JM, et al.
Nucleus-encoded,
plastid-targeted acetolactate synthase genes in two closely related
chlorophytes, Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Volvox carteri: phylogenetic origins and recent insertion of
introns
MOL GEN GENET 262 (1): 12-21 AUG 1999
Abstract:
Acetolactate synthase (ALS catalyzes the first committed step in the synthesis
of branched-chain amino acids. In green plants and fungi, ALS is encoded by a
nuclear gene whose product is targeted to plastids (in plants) or to
mitochondria tin fungi). In red algae, the gene is plastid-encoded. We have
determined the complete sequence of nucleus-encoded ALS genes from the green algae
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii and Volvox carteri.
Phylogenetic analyses of the ALS gene family indicate that the ALS genes of
green algae and plants are closely related, sharing a recent common ancestor.
Furthermore, although these genes are clearly of eubacterial origin, a
relationship to the ALS genes of red algae and cyanobacteria (endosymbiotic
precursors of plastids) is only weakly indicated. The algal ALS genes are
distinguished from their homologs in higher plants by the fact that they are
interrupted by numerous spliceosomal introns; plant ALS genes completely lack
introns. The restricted phylogenetic distribution of these introns suggests
that they were inserted recently, after the divergence of these green algae
from plants. Two introns in the Volvox ALS gene, not
found in the Chlamydomonas gene, are positioned precisely at sites which
resemble "proto-splice" sequences in the Chlamydomonas gene.
Kobayashi K,
Koyanagi R, Matsumoto M, et al.
Switching
from asexual to sexual reproduction in the planarian Dugesia ryukyuensis:
Bioassay system and basic description of sexualizing process
ZOOL SCI 16 (2): 291-298 APR 1999
Abstract:
An assay system has been established for the sexual induction in the OH strain,
an exclusively fissiparous (asexual) strain, of Dugesia ryukyuensis by feeding
them with sexually matured worms of Bdellocephala brunnea, an exclusively
oviparous (sexual) species. In this assay system, asexual worms gradually
differentiated sexual organs, namely the ovary, testis, genital pore and yolk
gland in this order, and eventually mated and laid cocoons filled with
fertilized eggs. Although the OH strain worms were believed not to have any sexual
organs, a pair of undeveloped ovaries with a few oogonia were
detected by an intensive histological search. Along with the progression of
sexualization, five distinct stages were histologically recognized: In the
first stage, the ovaries became larger enough to be externally apparent;
oocytes appeared first at stage 2; the primordial testes emerged at stage 3; a
genital pore opened, yolk gland primordia developed and spermatocytes appeared
at stage 4; and finally at stage 5 matured spermatozoa and yolk glands were
formed. Worms in stages 1 and 2 but not in later stages returned asexual if feeding on
B, brunnea was interrupted. Furthermore, when the worms at stage 3 onwards were
cut posterior to the ovaries, all the tail regenerants developed eventually into
fully sexualized worms. Taking these results in account, we have concluded that
the process of sexualization has a point-of-no-return between stages 2 and 3.
It is likely also that the testes, even the primordia, play an important role
in the maintenance and development of sexuality.
Hoops HJ, Brighton MC, Stickles
SM, et al.
A
test of two possible mechanisms for phototactic steering in Volvox carteri (Chlorophyceae)
J PHYCOL 35 (3): 539-547 JUN 1999
Abstract:
We tested two competing models that could explain how differential flagellar
activity leads to phototactic turning in spheroids of Volvox carteri f, weismannia (Powers) Iyengar. In one model, turning results
from the flagella of anterior cells in the lighted and shadowed hemispheres
beating at different frequencies. In a competing model, turning results from a
change in beat direction in these flagella. Both models successfully explain
phototactic steering under constant illumination, but they make different
predictions when colonies are exposed to abrupt changes in light intensity. If
turning is due to control of flagellar beat frequency, both progression and
rotation rates will change in the same direction and with similar magnitudes.
If spheroid turning is due to a change in flagellar beat direction, a decreased
rate of progression will accompany an increased rate of rotation and vice
versa. We used video-microscopy to observe the behavior of positively
phototactic V. carteri spheroids exposed to 10x step-up and step-down stimuli.
After a step-up stimulus, spheroids slow their progression and rotation by
equal amounts, No significant changes are reported in these parameters after
the reciprocal step-down response. These observations are consistent with the
variable flagellar frequency model and inconsistent with the variable flagellar
direction model for phototactic turning. Switching the direction of Light
stimulus by 180 degrees results in reorientation of positively phototactic
spheroids, The kinetics of this reorientation did not
precisely match the predictions of either model.
Nishii I,
Ogihara S
Actomyosin
contraction of the posterior hemisphere is required for inversion of the Volvox embryo
DEVELOPMENT 126 (10): 2117-2127 MAY 1999
Abstract:
During inversion of a Volvox embryo, a series
of cell shape changes causes the multicellular sheet to bend outward, and
propagation of the bend from the anterior to the posterior pole eventually
results in an inside-out spherical sheet of cells. We use fluorescent and
electron microscopy to study the behavior of the cytoskeleton in cells
undergoing shape changes. Microtubules are aligned parallel to the cell's long
axis and become elongated in the bend. Myosin and actin filaments are arrayed
perinuclearly before inversion. In inversion, actin and myosin are located in a
subnuclear position throughout the uninverted region but this localization is
gradually lost towards the bend. Actomyosin inhibitors cause enlargement of the
embryo. The bend propagation is inhibited halfway and, as a consequence, the
posterior hemisphere remains uninverted. The arrested posterior hemisphere will
resume and complete inversion even in the presence of an actomyosin inhibitor
if the anterior hemisphere is removed microsurgically. We conclude that the
principal role of actomyosin in inversion is to cause a compaction of the posterior
hemisphere; unless the equatorial diameter of the embryo is reduced in this
manner, it is too large to pass through the opening defined by the
already-inverted anterior hemisphere.
Huey RB,
Berrigan D, Gilchrist GW, et al.
Testing
the adaptive significance of acclimation: A strong inference approach
AM ZOOL 39 (2): 323-336 APR 1999
Abstract:
Acclimation is a common phenotypic response to environmental change.
Acclimation is often thought to enhance performance and thus to be adaptive.
This view has recently been formalized as the "Beneficial Acclimation
Hypothesis" and predicts that individuals acclimated to one environment
perform better in that environment than do individuals acclimated to a
different environment. Although Beneficial Acclimation is appealing and widely
supported, recent studies with E. coli and Drosophila have challenged its
general validity. Although these challenges could be dismissed as mere
exceptions, they encourage a re-evaluation of the adaptive significance of
acclimation. Our philosophical approach differs from that of most previous
studies of acclimation, in which the prediction derived from a Beneficial
Acclimation perspective (e.g., heat tolerance is positively correlated with
acclimation temperature) is tested against the null hypothesis ("single
hypothesis approach"). Instead, we follow Huey and Berrigan (1996) in
advocating a strong inference approach (sensu Platt, 1964), which recognizes
that Beneficial Acclimation is actually one of a set of competing hypotheses
that make different predictions as to how developmental temperature influences
the thermal sensitivity of adults ("developmental acclimation").
Using this perspective, Huey and Berrigan proposed a factorial experimental
design (3 developmental by 3 adult temperatures) designed to discriminate among
all competing hypotheses. We now derive a formal statistical model (ANOVA with
orthogonal polynomial contrasts) for this experimental design and use it to
evaluate simultaneously the relative impact of each competing hypothesis. We
then apply this model to several case studies (Drosophila, Volvox, Trichogramma), and we review also a recent study with E. coli. The
influence of Beneficial Acclimation is supported (albeit often weakly) in most
cases. Nevertheless, other hypotheses (especially the Optimal Developmental
Temperature Hypothesis) often have a greater impact. Even so, however,
Beneficial Acclimation usually predicts relative performance at extreme test
temperatures. We conclude that, although rumors of its death are premature,
Beneficial Acclimation cannot be viewed as the dominant expectation, at least
with regard to developmental temperature acclimation. Moreover, our findings
reinforce the view that a strong inference approach provides a more
comprehensive portrait of complex biological responses than do
single-hypothesis approaches.
Hallmann A
Enzymes
in the extracellular matrix of Volvox:
an inducible, calcium-dependent phosphatase with a modular composition
J BIOL CHEM 274 (3): 1691-1697 JAN 15 1999
Abstract:
The volvocine algae provide the unique opportunity for exploring development of
an extracellular matrix. Volvox is the most
advanced member of this family and represents the simplest multicellular
organism, with differentiated cells, a complete division of labor, and a
complex extracellular matrix, which serves structural and enzymatic functions.
In Volvox carteri a glycosylated extracellular phosphatase was
identified, which is partially released from the extracellular matrix into the
growth medium. The phosphatase is synthesized in response to inorganic
phosphate starvation and is strictly to inorganic phosphate starvation and is
strictly calcium-dependent. The metalloenzyme has been purified to homogeneity
and characterized. Its gene and cDNA have been cloned. Comparisons of genomic
and cDNA sequences revealed an extremely intron-rich gene (32 introns), With an
apparent molecular mass of 160 kDa the Volvox extracellular
phosphatase is the largest phosphatase cloned, with no sequence similarity to
any other phosphatase. This enzyme exhibits a modular composition. There are
two large domains and a small one. The large domains are highly homologous to
each other and therefore most likely originated from gene duplication and
fusion. At least one EF-hand motif for calcium binding was identified in this
extracellular protein Volvox extracellular
phosphatase is the first calcium-dependent extracellular phosphatase to be
cloned.
Rodriguez H,
Haring MA, Beck CF
Molecular
characterization of two light-induced, gamete-specific genes from Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii that encode hydroxyproline-rich proteins
MOL GEN GENET 261 (2): 267-274 MAR 1999
Abstract:
Gametic differentiation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii is a two-step process,
which is controlled by the sequential action of the two extrinsic signals,
nitrogen starvation and blue light. The gamete-specific genes GAS28 and GAS29
are expressed in the late phase of gametogenesis. Their light-induced
expression is restricted to cells that have completed the first, nitrogen
starvation-activated, phase of differentiation. A comparison of the two genes
revealed striking similarities as well as differences. Their most prominent shared
feature is an extended sequence homology of over 90% in their 5'-untranslated
regions, suggesting a role in translational regulation. GAS28 and GAS29 both
encode hydroxyproline-rich proteins (HRGPs) of very similar sizes that exhibit
typical features of volvocalean cell wall constituents. GAS28 shows a high
degree of homology with the Volvox pherophorin gene
family, suggesting a relationship between these genes.
Bischoff F,
Molendijk A, Rajendrakumar CSV, et al.
GTP
binding proteins in plants
CELL MOL LIFE SCI 55 (2): 233-256 FEB 1999
Abstract:
GTP-binding proteins are found in all organisms. They are important switches
that cycle between an active and an inactive state, ensuring vectorial flow of
information on the expense of guanosine triphosphate (GTP). In this review, we
discuss current progress in the molecular characterization and functional
analysis of plant genes encoding heterotrimeric and small GTPases. An
up-to-date list in eluding all cloned plant GTPase genes is given and a
systematic classification is proposed.
Kirk MM,
Stark K, Miller SM, et al.
regA, a Volvox
gene that plays a central role in germ-soma differentiation, encodes a novel
regulatory protein
DEVELOPMENT 126 (4): 639-647 Feb 1999
Abstract:
Volvox has two cell types: mortal somatic cells and immortal germ cells. Here
we describe the transposon-tagging, cloning and characterization of regA, which
plays a central role as a master regulatory gene in Volvox germsoma differentiation by suppressing reproductive activities in
somatic cells. The 12.5 kb regA transcription unit generates a 6,725 nucleotide
mRNA that appears at the beginning of somatic cell differentiation, and that
encodes a 111 kDa RegA protein that localizes to the nucleus, and has an
unusual abundance of alanine, glutamine and proline, This is a compositional
feature shared by functional domains of many 'active' repressors, These
findings are consistent with the hypothesis that RegA acts in somatic cells to
repress transcription of genes required for growth and reproduction, including
13 genes whose products are required for chloroplast biogenesis.
Miller SM,
Kirk DL
glsA, a Volvox
gene required for asymmetric division and germ cell specification, encodes a
chaperone-like protein
DEVELOPMENT 126 (4): 649-658 FEB 1999
Abstract:
The gls genes of Volvox are required for the
asymmetric divisions that set apart cells of the germ and somatic lineages
during embryogenesis. Here we used transposon tagging to clone glsA, and then
showed that it is expressed maximally in asymmetrically dividing embryos, and
that it encodes a 748-amino acid protein with two potential protein-binding
domains. Site-directed mutagenesis of one of these, the J domain (by which
Hsp40-class chaperones bind to and activate specific Hsp70 partners) abolishes
the capacity of glsA to rescue mutants. Based on this and other considerations,
including the fact that the GlsA protein is associated with the mitotic spindle,
we discuss how it might function, in conjunction with an Hsp70-type partner, to
shift the division plane in asymmetrically dividing cells.
Nozaki H,
Ohta N, Takano H, et al.
Reexamination
of phylogenetic relationships within the colonial Volvocales (Chlorophyta): An
analysis of atpB and rbcL gene sequences
J PHYCOL 35 (1): 104-112 FEB 1999
Abstract:
The chloroplast-encoded atpB gene was sequenced from 33 strains representing 28
species of the colonial Volvocales (the Volvocaceae and its relatives) to
reexamine phylogenetic relationships as previously deduced by morphological
data and rbcL gene sequence data.1128 base pairs in the coding regions of the
atpB gene were analyzed by MP, NJ, and ML analyses, Although supported with
relatively low bootstrap values (75% and 65% in the NJ and ML analyses,
respectively), three anisogamous/oogamous volvocacean genera-Eudorina,
Pleodorina, and Volvox, excluding the section Volvox(= Euvolvox, illegitimate name), constituted a large monophyletic group
(Eudorina group), Outside the Eudorina group, a robust Lineage composed of
three species of Volvox sect, Volvox was resolved as in the rbcL gene trees, rejecting the hypothesis of the
previous cladistic analysis based on morphological data that the genus Volvox is monophyletic, In addition, the NJ and ML trees suggested that
Eudorina is a non-monophyletic genus as inferred from the morphological data
and rbcL gene sequences. Although phylogenetic status of the genus Gonium is
ambiguous in the rbcL gene trees and the paraphyly of this genus is resolved in
the cladistic analysis based on morphological data, the atpB gene sequence data
suggest monophyly of Gonium with relatively low bootstrap values (56-61%) in
the NJ and ML trees. On the basis of the combined sequence data (2256 base
pairs) from atpB and rbcL genes, Gonium was resolved as a robust monophyletic
genus in the NJ and ML trees (with 68-86% bootstrap values), and Eudorina
elegans Ehrenberg represented a paraphyletic species positioned most basally
within the Eudorina group, However, phylogenetic status and relationships of
the families of the colonial Volvocales were still almost ambiguous even in the
combined analysis.
Braun FJ,
Hegemann P
Two
light-activated conductances in the eye of the green alga Volvox carteri
BIOPHYS J 76 (3): 1668-1678 MAR 1999
Abstract:
Photoreceptor currents of the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri were analyzed using a dissolver mutant. The photocurrents are
restricted to the eyespot region of somatic cells. Photocurrents are detectable
from intact cells and excised eyes. The rhodopsin action spectrum suggests that
the currents are induced by Volvox rhodopsin.
Flash-induced photocurrents are a composition of a fast Ca2+-carried current
(P-F) and a slower current (P-S), which is carried by H+. P-F is a
high-intensity response that appears with a delay of less than 50 mu s after
flash. The stimulus-response curve of its initial rise is fit by a single
exponential and parallels the rhodopsin bleaching. These two observations
suggest that the responsible channel is closely connected to the rhodopsin,
both forming a tight complex. At low flash energies P-S is dominating. The
current delay increases up to 10 ms, and the P-S amplitude saturates when only
a few percent of the rhodopsin is bleached. The data are in favor of a second
signaling system, which includes a signal transducer mediating between
rhodopsin and the channel. We present a model of how different modes of signal
transduction are accomplished in this alga under different light conditions.
Hallmann A,
Rappel A
Genetic
engineering of the multicellular green alga Volvox: a modified and multiplied bacterial antibiotic resistance
gene as a dominant selectable marker
PLANT J 17 (1): 99-109 JAN 1999
Abstract:
The green alga Volvox represents the simplest
multicellular organism: Volvox is composed of
only two cell types, somatic and reproductive. Volvox, therefore, is an
attractive model system for studying various aspects of multicellularity. With
the biolistic nuclear transformation of Volvox carteri, the
powerful molecular genetic manipulation of this organism has been established,
but applications have been restricted to an auxotrophic mutant serving as the
DNA recipient. Therefore, a dominant selectable marker working in all strains
and mutants of this organism is required. Among several gene constructs tested,
the most advantageous results were obtained with a chimeric gene composed of
the coding sequence of the bacterial ble gene, conferring resistance to the
antibiotic zeocin, modified with insertions of two endogenous introns from the Volvox arylsulfatase gene and fused to 5' and 3' untranslated regions from the Volvox beta 2-tubulin gene. In the most suitable plasmid used, the gene dosage
was increased 16-fold by a technique that allows exponential multiplication of
a DNA fragment. Go-transformation of this plasmid and a non-selectable plasmid
allowed the identification of zeocin resistant transformants with nuclear
integration of both selectable and non-selectable plasmids. Stable expression
of the ble gene and of genes from several non-selectable plasmids is
demonstrated. The modified ble gene provides the first dominant marker for
transformation of both wild-type and mutant strains of Volvox.
Fabry S,
Kohler A, Coleman AW
Intraspecies
analysis: Comparison of ITS sequence data and gene intron sequence data with breeding
data for a worldwide collection of Gonium pectorale
J MOL EVOL 48 (1): 94-101 JAN 1999
Abstract:
The morphologically uniform species Gonium pectorale is a colonial green
flagellate of worldwide distribution. The affinities of 25 isolates from 18 sites
on five continents were assessed by both DNA sequence comparisons and sexual
compatibility. Complete sequences were obtained (i) for the internal
transcribed spacer ITS-1 and ITS-2 regions of ribosomal DNA and (ii) for each
of three single-copy spliceosomal introns, two in a small G protein and one in
the actin gene. ITS sequences appeared to homogenize sufficiently rapidly to
behave as a single copy gene. Intron sequence differences between isolates in
this species reached nucleotide substitution saturation, while ITS sequences
did not. Parsimony and evolutionary distance analysis of the two types of DNA
data gave essentially the same tree conformation. By all these criteria, the
group of G. pectorale isolates fell into two main clades, A and B. Clade A,
with isolates from four continents, was comprised of four subclades of quite
closely related isolates, plus one strain of ambiguous affinity. Clade B was
comprised of two subclades represented by South African and South American
isolates, respectively; thus, only subclades of clade B showed geographical
localization. With respect to mating, all isolates except one homothallic
strain and one apparently sterile strain fell into either one or the other of
two mating types. Pairings in all possible combinations revealed that isolates
from the same site formed abundant zygotes, which germinated to produce new,
sexually active organisms. Zygotes were also formed in many pairings of other
combinations, including crosses of clade A with clade B organisms, but none of
the latter produced viable germlings. The ability to mate and produce viable
progeny that were themselves capable of sexual reproduction was restricted to
members of subclades established on the basis of DNA sequence similarities.
Thus, the grades of difference in both nuclear intron sequences and rDNA ITS
sequences paralleled those observed in the sexual analysis.
Miller SM,
Kirk DL
glsA, a Volvox
gene required for asymmetric division and germ cell specification, encode a
chaperone-like protein that co-localizes with the mitotic spindle
MOL BIOL CELL 10: 2265 Suppl. S NOV 1999
1998
Gonzalez MA,
Gomez PI, Montoya R
Comparison
of PCR-RFLP analysis of the ITS region with morphological criteria of various
strains of Dunaliella
J APPL PHYCOL 10 (6): 573-580 1998
Abstract:
The genus Dunaliella comprises 28 species defined primarily by morphological
and physiological criteria, which vary considerably depending on growth
conditions. Concomitantly, the taxonomic status of various species is
uncertain. To confirm the taxonomic identity and to better understand the
relationship within Dunaliella, seven taxa (D. salina, D. bardawil, D.
tertiolecta, D. parva, D. viridis, D. lateralis, D.
peircei) were compared using RFLP analysis of the nuclear rDNA repeats,
specifically the internal transcribed spacer regions, including the 5.8S rRNA
gene. Volvox aureus was used as an outgroup.
A single ITS PCR amplification product was obtained for each taxon. An ITS
fragment of ca. 640 bp was present in all the taxa within the subgenus
Dunaliella, except for D. salina CCMP 1303 (ca. 540 bp) and D. lateralis
(subgenus Pascheria) (ca. 600 bp). A cluster analysis based on the presence or
absence of bands generated by digestion of the PCR product with 8 restriction
endonucleases (DpnI, HhaI, EcoRI, PVuII, TaqI, HaeIII, MspI, StyI)
revealed no correlation between the genetic relationship inferred from the
ITS-RFLP data and the morpho-physiological attributes used for taxonomy. In
addition, differences in morphology, physiology and in the length and restriction
fragment patterns of the ITS region of D. salina CCMP
1303 suggest that this strain does not belong to Dunaliella.
Kobl I, Kirk
DL, Schmitt R
Quantitative PCR data falsify the
chromosomal endoreduplication hypothesis for Volvox carteri (Volvocales, Chlorophyta)
J PHYCOL 34 (6): 981-988 DEC
1998
Abstract:
Two conflicting hypotheses for chromosome replication in the Volvocaceae, one
postulating multiple rounds of replication prior to cell division
(endoreduplication) and the other claiming a canonical sequence of one round of
nuclear DNA replication preceding each cell division, have been tested
experimentally. Competitive PCR of the single-copy actin gene (target) of Volvox carteri f. nagariensis Iyengar and a shortened gene version (competitor)
containing the same primer binding sites were used to assess the genome
equivalents present in a given number of cells. Determining the molar ratio of
the PCR products generated from target DNA (extracted from a known number of
cells) acid defined numbers of competitor molecules revealed that Volvox embryos between the one- and 16-cell stages possess an average of
between one and two-but never more than two-copies of the actin gene. This led
us to conclude that the number of genome equivalents per nucleus in dividing Volvox embryos varies only between one and two and that, unlike the case
predicted by endoredduplication, the nuclear genome undergoes only one round of
replication prior to each cell division.
Sekimoto H,
Fukumoto R, Dohmae N, et al.
Molecular
cloning of a novel sex pheromone responsible for the release of a different sex
pheromone in Closterium peracerosum-strigosum-littorale complex
PLANT CELL PHYSIOL 39 (11): 1169-1175 NOV 1998
Abstract:
A sex pheromone, protoplast-release-inducing protein (PR-IP) inducer, of the
Closterium peracerosum-strigosum-littorale complex is known to induce the
release of PR-IF, from mating-type plus (mtf) cells during sexual reproduction.
The purified PR-IF inducer was treated with trypsin to obtain internal peptides
for determination of partial amino acid sequences. Using these sequences,
oligonucleotides were synthesized and used as primers for the combined reverse
transcription-PCR, A 296 bp cDNA fragment was amplified, permitting the cloning
of corresponding full length cDNA (CpPI; Closterium peracerosum-strigosum-littorale
complex PR-IF inducer). The deduced amino acid sequence of CpPI encodes a
protein of 212 amino acid residues of M-r 23,071 whereas portion of the peptide
secreted is predicted to have 142 amino acid residues of M-r 15,717 and shows
no significant similarity with known proteins. The predicted protein has three
possible consensus sequences for asparagine-linked glycosylation site. The CpPI
gene was expressed when mating-type minus (mt(-))
cells were incubated at a low cell density in the light. Nitrogen deprivation
from the medium enhances expression of the CpPI gene. An analysis by genomic
Southern hybridization revealed that the cDNA probe hybridized to several DNA
fragments obtained from both the genome of mt(-) and
mt(+) cells. However, in mt- cells, transcripts for the PR-IF
inducer could not be detected by Northern hybridization.
Schirmer A,
Kolter R
Computational
analysis of bacterial sulfatases and their modifying enzymes
CHEM BIOL 5 (8): R181-R186 AUG 1998
Abstract:
The sequence analysis of enzymes that might modify bacterial sulfatases should
be useful in the task of identifying the human sulfatase-modifying homologs enzymes
that are defective in the rare inherited disease multi sulfatase deficiency.
Gladyshev MI, Sushchik NN, Kalachova GS, et al.
The
effect of algal blooms on the disappearance of phenol in a small forest pond
WATER RES 32 (9): 2769-2775 SEP 1998
Abstract:
Using experimental microecosystems the kinetics of phenol disappearance in
small forest pond waters (Siberia, Russia) in the summer of 1995-96 were investigated. Despite of high variability
of components of the ecosystem (plankton biomass and species composition) and
two pronounced "blooms" of green algae Volvox aureus the same kinetics of the disappearance took place over the
investigated period. Half-lives of the pollutant depended on water temperature
only. A comparison of the self-purification of the pond with that of the Krasnoyarsk reservoir,
"blooming" with blue-greens was carried out. Half-lives in the pond
were significantly lower than that in the reservoir. During the periods of
"blooms" of the green algae in the pond the concentrations of
inorganic nutrients were comparatively high and the phenol-degrading bacteria
likely were not limited by these nutrients, in contrast to the periods of
"bloom" of the blue-green algae in the reservoir. (C) 1998 Elsevier
Science Ltd. All rights reserved.
von Figura K, Schmidt B, Selmer T, et al.
A
novel protein modification generating an aldehyde group in sulfatases: its role
in catalysis and disease
BIOESSAYS 20 (6): 505-510 JUN 1998
Abstract:
In multiple sulfatase deficiency, a rare human lysosomal storage disorder, all
known sulfatases are synthesized as catalytically poorly active polypeptides.
Analysis of the latter has shown that they lack a protein modification that was
detected in all members of the sulfatase family. This novel protein
modification generates a 2-amino-3-oxopropanoic acid (C alpha-formylglycine)
residue by oxidation of the thiol group of a cysteine that is conserved among
all eukaryotic sulfatases, The oxidation occurs in the endoplasmic reticulum at
a stage when the nascent polypeptide is not yet folded. The aldehyde is part of
the catalytic site and is likely to act as an aldehyde hydrate. One of the
geminal hydroxyl groups accepts the sulfate during sulfate ester cleavage
leading to the formation of a covalently sulfated enzyme intermediate. The
other hydroxyl is required for the subsequent elimination of the sulfate and
regeneration of the aldehyde group. In some prokaryotic members of the
sulfatase gene family, the DNA sequence predicts a serine residue, and not a
cysteine, Analysis of one of these prokaryotic sulfatases, however, revealed
the presence of the C alpha-formylglycine indicating that the aldehyde group is
essential for all members of the sulfatase family and that it can be generated
from either cysteine or serine, (C) 1998 John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Arai S,
Takahashi H, Takano H, et al.
Isolation,
characterization, and chromosome mapping of an actin gene from the primitive
green alga, Nannochloris bacillaris (Chorophyceae)
J PHYCOL 34 (3): 477-485 JUN 1998
Abstract:
Historically, the genus Nannochloris has been classified using the morphology
of cell division, although the mechanics of division remain relatively poorly
understood. Nannochloris bacillaris reproduces by binary fission. Microscopic
observation with fluorescein isothiocyanate-phaloloidin showed that actin
filaments localized near the nucleus and appeared as a ring- or beltlike
structure in the septum-forming area in the middle of the cell during cell
division. In primitive unicellular Chlorophyta such as N. bacillaris, actin is
also thought to play important roles in nuclear migration and cell division.
The N. bacillaris actin gene has three exons and two introns defined by two
exon-intron junctions with splice site consensus sequences. The two introns are
located at codons specifying amino acids 3/4 and 47/48. One of these, intron
position 3/4, is conserved in the actin gene of Saccharomyces cerevisiae. The
actin gene product was predicted to be 378 amino acids long with an estimated
molecular weight of 42 kDa. There is only one copy of the actin gene in the N.
bacillaris genome. Nannochloris bacillaris has 14 chromosomes that range in
size from 230 kb to 3000 kb, and the total size of the genome was estimated to be
20.3 Mb. The actin gene is on either chromosome XI or XII. In a phylogenetic
tree based on the actin gene sequence, N. bacillaris diverged before the
divergence of Volvox, Chlamydomonas, and higher
plants, and very shortly after the radiation of the Rhodophyta.
Amon P, Haas
E, Sumper M
The
sex-inducing pheromone and wounding trigger the same set of genes in the
multicellular green alga Volvox
PLANT CELL 10 (5): 781-789 MAY 1998
Abstract:
The sex-inducing pheromone of the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri is a glycoprotein that triggers development of males and females
at a concentration <10(-16) M. By differential screening of a cDNA library,
two novel genes were identified that are transcribed under the control of this
pheromone. Unexpectedly, one gene product was characterized as a
lysozyme/chitinase, and the other gene product was shown to encode a
polypeptide with a striking modular composition. This polypeptide has a
cysteine protease domain separated by an extensin-like module from three
repeats of a chitin binding domain. In higher plants, similar protein families
are known to play an important role in defense against fungi. Indeed, we found that
the same set of genes triggered by the sexual pheromone was also inducible in
V. carteri by wounding.
Hallmann A,
Godl K, Wenzl S, et al.
The
highly efficient sex-inducing pheromone system of Volvox
TRENDS MICROBIOL 6 (5): 185-189 MAY 1998
Abstract:
The green alga Volvox is one of the simplest
multicellular organisms and is capable of both asexual and sexual reproduction.
Sexual development is initiated by a glycoprotein pheromone that acts at a
concentration below 10(-16) M. The extracellular matrix (ECM) appears to play a
key role in signal amplification: several ECM proteins contain a domain with
homology to the sex-inducing pheromone.
El-Naggar
MEE, Shaaban-Dessouki SA, Abdel-Hamid MI, et al.
Studies
on the phytoplankton populations and physico-chemical conditions of treated
sewage discharged into Lake Manzala in Egypt
MICROBIOLOGICA 21 (2): 183-196 APR 1998
Abstract:
Over a full year, the phytoplankton populations and physico-chemical conditions
of treated sewage discharged into Lake Manzala in Egypt were
investigated. Sixty-seven species of algae were identified, 18 Cyanophyta
(Cyanobacteria), 19 Chlorophyta, 21 Bacillariophyta, 6 Euglenophyta, 2
Cryptophyta and one species Pyrrhophyta. Nitzschia (6 spp.), Scenedesmus (6
spp.), Navicula (4 spp.), Oscillatoria (4 spp.) and Euglena (4 spp.) were the most
common genera.
A remarkable
seasonal variation in species composition and standing crop of the
phytoplankton populations was noted during the study. The total phytoplankton
standing crop appeared to be mainly dependent on the growth of certain species
viz., Oscillatoria chalybea, O. princepes, O. tenuis, Microcystis aeruginosa,
Anabaena constricta (Cyanophyta), Nitzschia obtusa, Bacillaria paradoxa,
Cocconeis placentula, Cyclotella meneghiniana (Bacillariophyta), Pandorina
morum, Volvox sp. (Chlorophyta) and Phacus curvicauda (Euglenophyta).
The continuous presence of Anabaena constricta and Nitzschia palea was recorded
in the treated sewage. The least represented algal divisions were Pyrrhophyta
and Cryptophyta, both in terms of quality and quantity.The data indicate that
the secondary effluents were unstable in their chemical features and grossly
polluted. Therefore, the treatment systems must treat the discharged sewage to
a tertiary level before discharging into Lake Manzala.
Corrette-Bennett
J, Rosenberg M, Przybylska M, et al.
Positional
cloning without a genome map: Using 'Targeted RFLP Subtraction' to isolate
dense markers tightly linked to the regA locus of Volvox carteri
NUCLEIC ACIDS RES 26 (7): 1812-1818 APR 1 1998
Abstract:
The ability to isolate genes defined by mutant phenotypes has fueled the rapid
progress in understanding basic biological mechanisms and the causes of
inherited diseases. Positional cloning, a commonly used method for isolating
genes corresponding to mutations, is most efficiently applied to the small
number of model organisms for which high resolution genetic maps exist. We
demonstrate a new and generally applicable positional cloning method that
obviates the need for a genetic map. The technique is based on Restriction
Fragment Length Polymorphism (RFLP) Subtraction, a method that isolates RFLP
markers spanning an entire genome, The new method,
Targeted RFLP Subtraction (TRS), isolates markers from a specific region by
combining RFLP Subtraction with a phenotypic pooling strategy. We used TRS to
directly isolate dense markers tightly linked to the regA gene of the
eukaryotic green alga Volvox, As a generally applicable method for saturating a small
targeted region with DNA markers, TRS should facilitate gene isolation from
diverse organisms and accelerate the process of physically mapping specific
regions in preparation for sequence analysis.
ten Lohuis MR, Miller DJ
Genetic
transformation of dinoflagellates (Amphidinium and Symbiodinium): expression of
GUS in microalgae using heterologous promoterconstructs
PLANT J 13 (3): 427-435 FEB 1998
Abstract:
Genetic transformation of two dinoflagellates (Amphidinium sp., Symbiodinium
microadriaticum) was achieved using plasmid constructs containing the neomycin
phosphotransferase gene (nptll) fused to the Agrobacterium nos promoter, or the
hygromycin B phosphotransferase gene (hpt) fused to the bidirectional
Agrobacterium p1'2' promoter. Gene transfer into intact (walled) dinoflagellate
cells was achieved by agitation in the presence of silicon carbide (SiCa)
whiskers. Transformation rates of 5-24 transformants per 10(7) cells were
obtained. Southern hybridization of transformants revealed stable integration
of multiple copies of the constructs. Activity of integrated copies of the
beta-glucoronidase (GUS) reporter gene coupled to the cauliflower mosaic virus
35S promotor or the p1'2' promoter was confirmed both histochemically and
fluorometrically. This is the first report of successful application bf
heterologous and widely used promoter and reporter genes in microalgae, and is the
first demonstration of transformation of a dinoflagellate. There appear to be
no substantial barriers to transformation of Amphidinium and Symbiodinium,
which must now be considered as the first of the dinoflagellate genera
accessible to genetic manipulation.
Miller SM,
Kirk DL
glsA, a Volvox
gene required for asymmetric division and germ cell specification encodes a
chaperone-like protein
MOL BIOL CELL 9: 1694 Suppl. S NOV 1998
Bell G
Volvox - Molecular-genetic origins of
multicellularity and cellular differentiation
SCIENCE 282 (5387): 248-248 OCT 9 1998
Sumper M,
Hallmann A
Biochemistry
of the extracellular matrix of Volvox
INT REV CYTOL 180: 51-85 1998
1997
Kirk DL
The
genetic program for germ-soma differentiation in Volvox
ANNU REV GENET 31: 359-380 1997
Abstract:
Volvox carteri possesses only two cell types: mortal somatic cells and
potentially immortal asexual reproductive cells called gonidia. Mutational
analysis indicates that three categories of genes play central roles in
programming this germ-soma division of labor: First the gls genes function
during embryogenesis to cause asymmetric divisions that produce large and small
cells. Then the lag genes act in the large cells (gonidial initials) to repress
functions required for somatic development while the regA locus acts in the
small cells (somatic initials) to repress functions required for reproductive
development. Transposon tagging and DNA transformation have recently been used
to recover and characterize the glsA and regA genes, and the sequences of these
genes lead to testable hypotheses about how they play their roles in germ-soma
differentiation.
Kroger N,
Lehmann G, Rachel R, et al.
Characterization
of a 200-kDa diatom protein that is specifically associated with a silica-based
substructure of the cell wall
EUR J BIOCHEM 250 (1): 99-105 NOV 15 1997
Abstract:
The cell wall of a diatom is made up of a silica-based scaffold and organic
macromolecules. Proteins located in the cell wall are believed to control
morphogenesis of the species-specific silica structures of the scaffold.
However, data that correlate distinct silica elements and specific proteins
within the diatom cell wall have not been reported. Here, the cell wall protein
HEP2OO (200-kDa HE-extractable protein) from the diatom Cylindrotheca
fusiformis is identified and characterized. HEP200 is tightly associated with a
substructure of the silica scaffold. It is a member of a new protein family, of
which two more members are identified. Each member displays the same bipartite
structure. The N-terminal part consists of a variable number of a repeated
sequence motif (PSCD domain), whereas the C-terminal part is unique,
Immunolocalization experiments revealed the arrangement of different proteins
within the cell wall. Frustulins, a previously described group of
glycoproteins, constitute the outer coat of the cell wall and exhibit a
ubiquitous distribution. In contrast, HEP200 is specifically located at a
subset of about six silica strips in intact cell walls, shielded by frustulins.
This study therefore identifies a diatom cell wall protein (HEP200) that is
associated with a distinct substructure of the silica scaffold.
Kurvari V
Cell
wall biogenesis in Chlamydomonas: molecular characterization of a novel protein
whose expression is up-regulated during matrix formation
MOL GEN GENET 256 (5): 572-580 NOV 1997
Abstract:
In the unicellular eukaryote Chlamydomonas, disruption of cell-matrix
interactions by treatment with a periplasmic matrix metalloproteinase, g-lysin,
activates a signal transduction pathway that results in the rapid synthesis and
secretion of matrix molecules, followed by their assembly into a new matrix. I
have identified and partially characterized several cDNA clones for transcripts
that are dramatically up-regulated following treatment of cells with g-lysin.
Here I report the complete nucleotide sequence and preliminary characterization
of a matrix-related molecule termed Mrp47. The cDNA clone for Mrp47 contained
an insert of 2.5 kb, corresponding to a transcript of 3.0 kb that is encoded by
a single-copy gene. Sequence analysis indicated that Mrp47 cDNA contains an
open reading frame (ORF) that encodes a 46-kDa polypeptide. The putative
polypeptide is unusually rich in the amino acids proline, alanine and serine,
with prolines clustered together in a 30-amino acid N-terminal region and a 80-amino acid C-terminal region. Further analysis of the
predicted amino acid sequence suggested that Mrp47 is likely to be a secreted
glycoprotein. Southern hybridization analysis indicated that Mrp47 is encoded
by a single-copy gene in the Chlamydomonas genome. Database searches suggested
that Mrp47 shows homology to other proline-rich proteins including a surface
glycoprotein in Volvox and verprolin from yeast.
Hoops HJ
Motility
in the colonial and multicellular Volvocales: structure, function, and
evolution
PROTOPLASMA 199 (3-4): 99-112 1997
Abstract:
The colonial Volvocales are often said to be composed of Chlamydomonas-like
cells, but there are substantial differences in motility and flagellar
apparatus construction between the unicellular forms and the individual members
of a colony or spheroid. These changes appear to be required for effective
organismal motion and might possibly limit the rate at which new colonial forms
evolve from unicellular ones. The flagellar-beat envelopes in colonial members
are modified such that they beat in the same direction and in parallel planes
with their effective strokes at right angles to the cellular anterior-posterior
axis. These changes result from a series of developmental events of the
flagellar apparatus of the colonial forms while the colony is still an embryo.
Differences in the flagellar-apparatus structure in the members of the
Goniaceae and Volvocaceae are not obviously correlated with the traditional
placement of these algae in a simple volvocine lineage. Effective colonial
motion clearly requires precise positioning and rotational orientation of the
cells within the colony. Almost any arrangement where the cells are placed with
rotational symmetry within the colony results in colonial progression with
rotation. Such rotational symmetry is present from the time of embryogenesis.
The mechanism that leads to organismal steering in behavioral responses (e.g.,
phototaxis) must likewise differ between colonial and unicellular forms. Ln at
least some cases, this appears to result from changes in beat frequency in some
parts of the spheroid, but changes in beat direction cannot be ruled out for
all forms.
Hegemann P
Vision
in microalgae
PLANTA 203 (3): 265-274 NOV 1997
Abstract:
Flagellate green algae such as Chlamydomonas and related genera are guided by
their eyes to places where light conditions are optimal for photosynthetic
growth. These eyes constitute the simplest and most common visual system found
in nature. The eyes contain optics, photoreceptors and the elementary
components of a signal-transduction chain. Rhodopsin serves as the
photoreceptor, as it does in animal vision. Upon light stimulation, its
all-trans-retinal chromophore isomerizes into 13-cis and activates a
photoreceptor channel which leads to a rapid Ca2+ influx into the eyespot
region. At low light levels, the depolarization activates small flagellar
currents which induce in both flagella small but slightly different beating
changes resulting in distinct directional changes. In continuous light, Ca2+
fluxes serve as the molecular basis for phototaxis. In response to flashes of
higher energy the larger photoreceptor currents trigger a massive Ca2+ influx
into the flagella which causes the well-known phobic response. The
identification of proteins contributing to this signalling system has just
begun with the isolation and cloning of the opsins from Chlamydomonas and Volvox. These plant opsins are highly charged, are not typical seven-helix
receptors, and are believed to form a protein complex with the photoreceptor
channel. In Spermatozopsis, a G-protein has been found which interacts either
directly with the rhodopsin or with the rhodopsin-ion channel complex. By using
insertional mutagenesis, genes coding for proteins that are involved in
signalling have been tagged. One of them is connected to the flagellar channel
and crucial for the flagellar action potential. Elucidation of photoreception
in flagellated algae will provide deeper insight into the development of visual
systems, starting from single-celled organisms and moving up through higher
animals.
Nozaki H, Ito
M, Uchida H, et al.
Phylogenetic
analysis of Eudorina species (Valvocaceae, Chlorophyta) based on rbcL gene
sequences
J PHYCOL 33 (5): 859-863 OCT 1997
Abstract:
Species and varieties in the genus Eudorina Ehrenberg (Volvocaceae,
Chlorophyta) were evaluated on the basis of phylogenetic analyses of the large
subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL) gene sequence
from 14 strains of four Eudorina species, as well as from nine species of
Pleodorina and Volvox. The sequence data suggested
that 10 of the 14 Eudorina strains form three separate and robust monophyletic
groups within the nonmonophyletic genus Eudorina. The first group comprises ail
three strains off. unicocca G. M. Smith; the second group consists of one of
the E, elegans Ehrenberg var elegans strains, the E. cylindrica Korshikov
strain, and both E. illinoisensis (Kofoid) Pascher strains; and the third group
consists of two monoecious varieties off, elegans [two strains of E. elegans
var synoica Goldstein and one strain of E. elegans var. carteri (G. hi. Smith) Goldstein]. In addition, E. illinoisensis represents
a poly- or paraphyletic species within the second group. The remaining four
strains, all of which are assigned to E. elegans var. elegans, are
nonmonophyletic. Although their position in the phylogenetic trees is more or
less ambiguous, they are ancestral to other taxa ill the large
anisogamous/oogamous monophyletic group including Eudorina, Pleodorina, and Volvox (except for sect. Volvox). Thus, the four Eudorina groups resolved in the present molecular
phylogeny do not correspond with the species concepts of Eudorina based on
vegetative morphology, but they do reflect the results Of
the previous intercrossing experiments and modes of monoecious and dioecious
sexual reproduction.
Dierks T,
Schmidt B, VonFigura K
Conversion
of cysteine to formylglycine: A protein modification in the endoplasmic
reticulum
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 94 (22):
11963-11968 OCT 28 1997
Abstract:
In sulfatases a C-alpha-formylglycine residue is found at a position where
their cDNA sequences predict a cysteine residue. In multiple sulfatase
deficiency, an inherited lysosomal storage disorder, catalytically inactive
sulfatases are synthesized which retain the cysteine residue, indicating that
the C,-formylglycine residue is required for sulfatase activity. Using in vitro
translation in the absence or presence of transport competent microsomes we
found that newly synthesized sulfatase polypeptides carry a cysteine residue
and that the oxidation of its thiol group to an aldehyde is catalyzed in the
endoplasmic reticulum. A linear sequence of 16 residues surrounding the Cys-69
in arylsulfatase A is sufficient to direct the oxidation, This
novel protein modification occurs after or at a late stage of cotranslational
protein translocation into the endoplasmic reticulum when the polypeptide is
not yet folded to its native structure.
Hallmann A,
Rappel A, Sumper M
Gene
replacement by homologous recombination in the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 94 (14):
7469-7474 JUL 8 1997
Abstract:
With only two different cell types, the haploid green alga Volvox represents the simplest multicellular model system. To facilitate
genetic investigations in this organism, the occurrence of homologous
recombination events was investigated with the intent of developing methods for
gene replacement and gene disruption. First, homologous recombination between
two plasmids was demonstrated by using overlapping nonfunctional fragments of a
recombinant arylsulfatase gene (tubulin promoter/arylsulfatase gene). After
bombardment of Volvox reproductive cells with
DNA-coated gold microprojectiles, transformants expressing arylsulfatase
constitutively were recovered, indicating the presence of the machinery for
homologous recombination in Volvox. Second, a well
characterized loss-of-function mutation in the nuclear nitrate reductase gene
(nitA) with a single G --> A nucleotide exchange in a 5'-splice site was
chosen as a target for gene replacement. Gene replacement by homologous
recombination was observed with a reasonably high frequency only if the
replacement vector containing parts of the functional nitrate reductase gene
contained only a few nucleotide exchanges. The ratio of homologous to random
integration events ranged between 1:10 and 1:50, i.e., homologous
recombination occurs frequently enough in Volvox to apply the
powerful tool of gene disruption for functional studies of novel genes.
Raven JA
Multiple
origins of plasmodesmata
EUR J PHYCOL 32 (2): 95-101 MAY 1997
Abstract:
Plasmodesmata in photosynthetic eukaryotes are found in all embryophytes, in
many members of the Chlorophyta, and in the Phaeophyceae. The Phaeophyceae and
the Chlorophyta clearly developed cell walls and multicellularity
independently, sc that (in the absence of lateral gene transfer) plasmodesmata
evolved independently in these groups. The minimum number of independent
origins of plasmodesmata in the Chlorophyta based on molecular phylogenies is
two (Chlorophyceae sensu late, Charophyceae sensu late). Other intercellular
connections in members of the Chlorophyta (Ctenocladus, Smithsoniella, Volvox) are structurally very different
from true plasmodesmata. Recently published taxonomies of the Chlorophyta have
five classes (Chlorophyceae, Oedegoniophyceae, Trentepohliophyceae,
Klebsormidiophyceae and Charophyceae sensu stricto) with plasmodesmata out of a
total of thirteen. However, it is by no means clear that these classes all
acquired plasmodesmata independently.
Nozaki H, Ito
M, Sano R, et al.
Phylogenetic analysis of
Yamagishiella and Platydorina (Volvocaceae, Chlorophyta) based on rbcL gene
sequences
J PHYCOL 33 (2):
272-278 APR 1997
Abstract:
Yamagishiella, based on Pandorina unicocca Rayburn et Starr is distinguished
from Eudorina by its isogamous sexual reproduction, whereas Platydorina
exhibits anisogamous sexual reproduction. In the present study, rue sequenced
the large subunit of ribulose-1,5-bisphosphate carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL)
genes from five Japanese and North American strains of Y. unicocca (Rayburn et
Stair) Nozaki, true Platydorina caudata Kofoid strains, and two strains of
Eudorina unicocca G. M. Smith, as well as eight related colonial and
unicellular species. Phylogenetic trees were constructed based on these
sequence data and on previously published rbcL gene sequences from 23
volvocalean species in order to deduce phylogenetic relationships within the
colonial Volvocales, with particular regard to the phylogenetic positions and
status of the genera Yamagishiella and Platydorina. Two robust monophyletic
groups of the anisogamous/oogamous volvocacean species were resolved in the
maximum-parsimony tree as well as in the neighbor-joining distance tree. One of
the two groups comprises three species of Volvox section Volvox, whereas the other is composed of other sections of Volvox as well as of all the species of Eudorina and Pleodorina. Platydorina,
however, was positioned outside these two monophyletic groups. Therefore,
derivation of the Platydorina lineage may be earlier than that of such
anisogamous/oogamous groups, or origin of ''anisogamy with sperm, packets'' in
Platydorina may De independent of sperm packet evolution in Eudorina,
Pleodorina, and Volvox. It was also resolved with
high bootstrap values that all of the Y. unicocca strains form a monophyletic
group positioned outside the large monophyletic group including Eudorina and
Pleodorina. These reject the possibility of the reverse evolution of isogamy
from anisogamy to give rise to Yamagishiella within the lineage of Eudorina.
Liss M, Kirk
DL, Beyser K, et al.
Intron
sequences provide a tool for high-resolution phylogenetic analysis of volvocine
algae
CURR GENET 31 (3): 214-227 MAR 1997
Abstract:
Three nuclear spliceosomal introns in conserved locations were amplified and
sequenced from 28 strains representing 14 species and 4 genera of volvocalean
green algae. Data derived from the three different introns yielded congruent
results in nearly all cases. In pairwise comparisons, a spectrum of
taxon-specific sequence differences ranging from complete identity to no significant
similarity was observed, with the most distantly related organisms lacking any
conserved elements apart from exon-intron boundaries and a pyrimidine-rich
stretch near the 3' splice site. A metric (SI50), providing a measure of the
degree of similarity of any pair of intron sequences, was defined and used to
calculate phylogenetic distances between organisms whose introns displayed
statistically significant similarities. The rate of sequences divergence in the
introns was great enough to provide useful information about relationships
among different geographical isolates of a single species, but in most cases
was too great to provide reliable guides to relationships above the species
level. A substitution rate of approximately 3 x 10(-8) per intron position per
year was estimated, which is about 150-fold higher than in nuclear genes
encoding rRNA and about 10-fold higher than the synonymous substitution rate in
protein-coding regions. Thus, these homologous introns not only provide useful
information about intraspecific phylogenetic relationships, but also illustrate
the concept that different parts of a gene may be subject to extremely
different intensities of selection. The intron data generated here (1) reliably
resolve for the first;time the relationships among the
five most extensively studied strains of Volvox, (2) reveal that
two other Volvox species may be more closely related than had
previously been suspected, (3) confirm prior evidence that particular isolates
of Eudorina elegans and Pleodorina illinoisensis appear to be sibling taxa, and
(4) contribute to the resolution of several hitherto unsettled issues in
Chlamydomonas taxonomy.
Godl K,
Hallmann A, Wenzl S, et al.
Differential
targeting of closely related ECM glycoproteins: The pherophorin family from Volvox
EMBO J 16 (1): 25-34 JAN 2 1997
Abstract:
The alga Volvox carteri represents one of the simplest multicellular
organisms. Its extracellular matrix (ECM) is modified under developmental
control, e.g. under the influence of the sex-inducing pheromone that triggers
development of males and females at a concentration below 10(-16) M. A novel
ECM glycoprotein (pherophorin-S) synthesized in response to this pheromone was
identified and characterized. Although being a typical member of the
pherophorins, which are identified by a C-terminal domain with sequence
homology to the sex-inducing pheromone, pherophorin-S exhibits a completely
novel set of properties. In contrast to the other members of the family, which
are found as part of the insoluble ECM structures of the cellular zone,
pherophorin-S is targeted to the cell-free interior of the spherical organism
and remains in a soluble state. A main structural difference is the presence of
a polyhydroxyproline spacer in pherophorin-S that is linked to a saccharide
containing a phosphodiester bridge between two arabinose residues. Sequence
comparisons indicate that the self-assembling proteins that create the main
parts of the complex Volvox ECM have evolved from a
common ancestral gene.
1996
Stratmann J,
Paputsoglu G, Oertel W
Differentiation
of Ulva mutabilis (Chlorophyta) gametangia and gamete release are controlled by
extracellular inhibitors
J PHYCOL 32 (6): 1009-1021 DEC 1996
Abstract:
Blade cells of Ulva mutabilis Foyn (Chlorophyta) excrete regulatory factors
into their cell walls and into the environment. These factors are essential for
the maintenance of the vegetative state. ''Sporulation inhibitor-1a'' (SI-1a)
is a glycoprotein that was isolated from the culture medium of axenic Ulva
growing as an undifferentiated callus. This protein was unusually stable to
denaturing treatments and showed an extremely high apparent molecular mass
(M(r)) of 1-4 X 10(7) daltons estimated by size exclusion chromatography. The
glycosylation was not essential for activity. SI-1a suppressed
gametogenesis completely at concentrations lower than 10(-14) M. When
Ulva developed normally in the presence of their symbiotic bacteria, smaller
forms of SI-1 accumulated in the medium (10(4) - 10(6) daltons). Sporulation
inhibitors of the same size spectrum and with similar properties were also
extracted from crude cell walls of nonaxenic Ulva. A class of different
nonprotein sporulation inhibitors (SI-2) of very low M(r) and yet unknown
structure was isolated from the inner space between the two blade cell layers.
Excretion of all SI-1 forms decreased with maturation of the thallus, whereas
the overally concentration of SI-2 in the thallus stayed constant throughout
the life cycle. The SI-2 affected different Ulva species whereas SI-1 was
species-specific. Gametogenesis was induced upon removal of both sporulation
inhibitors from small single-layered fragments of mature blades. After a
''determination phase'' of 23-46 h, dependent on the time of induction within
the cell cycle, the cells became irreversibly committed to differentiation and
were no longer susceptible to SI-1 or SI-2. Subsequently, during a 28-h
''differentiation phase,'' 16 progametes were formed by synchronous genome
doublings and cell divisions and differentiated into mature gametes. These
became motile and were released from the gametangia when the concentration of a
''swarming inhibitor'' of low M(r), excreted mainly during the ''determination
phase,'' declined below a threshold concentration. The biochemical properties
of these regulatory factors and their effects on gametogenesis and gamete
release are described.
Ichimura T
Genome
rearrangement and speciation in freshwater algae
HYDROBIOLOGIA 336 (1-3): 1-17 OCT 25 1996
Abstract:
Speciation problems are reviewed in the context of biogeography of fresh-water
algae. Currently accepted species concept in phycology is based on
morphological characters, and according to this concept, most freshwater algal
species are considered cosmopolitan. This implies whether they have a highly
efficient means of dispersal or their morphological characters are very static
through a long evolutionary time. Recent studies of reproductive isolation show
that some biological species of fresh-water algae are not so static or may not
have such a high power of dispersal means, though some are indeed very static
in morphological characters. The life cycle of most freshwater algae is
composed of a vegetative cycle of growth and reproduction and a sexual cycle of
gametic fusion and meiosis in the zygote, which forms a dormant spore-like
structure. Since any freshwater habitat is ephemeral in terms of evolutionary
time scale, each species has a capacity of forming germlings from a dormant
cell in order to recycle its life history. The genome of freshwater algae,
therefore, contains various coadapted gene systems, at least two, for the
vegetative and for the sexual cycle. Homothallism and heterothallism are two
contrasting mating systems that represent two opposing ways of life to
harmonize antagonism between the vegetative stage of growth and reproduction
and the sexual and dormant stage. Geographic and ecological distribution,
polyploidy, and sex determination are discussed in conjunction with sexual and
postzygotic isolating mechanisms.
Nozaki H
Morphology
and evolution of sexual reproduction in the Volvocaceae (Chlorophyta)
J PLANT RES 109 (1095): 353-361 SEP 1996
Abstract:
Morphological features of sexual reproduction in the Volvocaceae are reviewed,
focusing particularly on gametic union and zygote germination. Both of the two
conjugating gametes of the isogamous genera Pandorina, Volvulina and
Yamagishiella bear a tubular mating structure (mating papilla), and plasmogamy
is initiated by union of the papillae tips. On zygote germination, a single
biflagellate gone cell is released from the zygote wall. Although all the
anisogamous and oogamous genera of the Volvocaceae produce ''sperm packets''
during gametogenesis and a single gone cell at zygote germination, some
difference can be recognized in the male gametes. The male gametes of Eudorina
bear a tubular cytoplasmic protuberance (putative mating papilla) near the base
of the flagella, whereas such a structure recognized at the light microscopic
level is not evident in Pleodorina and Volvox, Evolution of the
sexual reproduction characteristics of volvocacean algae is discussed on the
basis of recent cladistic analysis of morphological data as well as of the
ribosomal (r) RNA phylogeny and large subunit of the ribulose-1,5-biphosphate
carboxylase/oxygenase(rbcL) gene trees.
Beyser K,
Fabry S
Identification
and characterization of a lower plant Ypt/Rab guanosine dissociation inhibitor
(GDI)
FEBS LETT 396 (2-3): 298-304 NOV 4 1996
Abstract:
The cDNA encoding a Ypt/Rab guanosine dissociation inhibitor (Ypt-GDI) was
isolated from the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri,
representing the first complete plant gdi gene described. The gdiV1 gene occurs
as a single copy in the algal genome, indicating that its product regulates all
YptV proteins from Volvox. The derived GDI protein
(GDIV1p) shows high similarity to animal and fungal GDIs. A specific antibody
developed against GDIV1p detected the protein throughout the whole Volvox life-cycle. GDIV1p was localized in the cytoplasm and in the algal
flagellum. This is in line with earlier findings of a dual localization of Ypt
proteins both in the cell body and in the motility organelle, and indicates a
novel role of the GDI/Ypt system, possibly in intraflagellar transport.
Choi G,
Przybylska M, Straus D
Three
abundant germ line-specific transcripts in Volvox carteri encode photosynthetic proteins
CURR GENET 30 (4): 347-355 SEP 1996
Abstract:
Volvox carteri is a multicellular eukaryotic green alga composed of about 2000
cells of only two differentiated types: somatic and germ line. To understand
how embryonic cells are assigned either to somatic or germ line fates, we are
investigating the regulation of transcripts that are abundant in only one cell
type. Here we report the identity of three
transcripts that are coordinately expressed at high levels in
germ line cells but not in somatic cells. Surprisingly, all three transcripts
encode photosynthetic chloroplast proteins (light-harvesting complex protein.
oxygen-evolving enhancer protein 3, and ferredoxin-NADP(+)
reductase) that are transcribed from nuclear genes. We discuss why these mRNAs
might be required at high levels in germ line cells and present a hypothesis,
suggested by our results, on the evolution of cell specialization in the
Volvocales.
Ortega MA,
DiazGuerra M, Sastre L
Actin
gene structure in two Artemia species, A-franciscana and A-parthenogenetica
J MOL EVOL 43 (3): 224-235 SEP 1996
Abstract:
Genomic clones coding for actin have been isolated from two species of the
crustacean Artemia, A. parthenogenetica and A. franciscana. The Act211 isoform
gene was isolated from A. parthenogenetica, and the two other isoform genes,
Act302 and Act403, were isolated from A. franciscana. The comparison of the
nucleotide sequence of genomic and cDNA clones showed an interspecific
divergence of 4% in translated and 6.1% in untranslated regions. However, the
establishment of the partial structure of the Act211 gene in A. franciscana and
of the Act302 gene in A. parthenogenetica suggests their similarity in the two
species. The Act211 gene is divided into four exons, the Act302 gene into six
exons, and the Act403 gene into seven exons. The three genes have introns in
the 5' untranslated region and between codons 41 and 42. The Act211 and 403
genes have one common intron in codon 168. The Act302 and 403 genes have common
introns between codons 121-122, 246-247, and within codon 301. While introns in
the 5' untranslated region and between codons 41-42 and 121-122 are present in
many organisms, the introns in positions 168 and 246-247 had only been found
previously in actin genes from the nematode Onchocerca volvulus and the green
alga Volvox carterii, respectively. The intron in position 301
had not been reported before. The transcription initiation sites of these three
genes as well as the nucleotide sequences of the promoter regions have been
also determined.
Huber H,
Beyser K, Fabry S
Small
G proteins of two green algae are localized to exocytic compartments and to
flagella
PLANT MOL BIOL 31 (2): 279-293 MAY 1996
Abstract:
The Ypt/Rab proteins are small GTPases, which belong to the Ras superfamily and
have been shown to be involved in endo- and exocytosis in mammalian cells and
yeast. Using affinity-purified antibodies specific for four Ypt proteins,
namely Ypt1p, Ypt4p, Ypt5p and Ypt6p, of the multicellular green alga Volvox carteri (YptVp) and its close unicellular relative Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii (YptCp), we examined the abundance of the corresponding antigens
during the asexual life cycle of Volvox, and their
intracellular localization. The YptV proteins were found in all stages
throughout the asexual life cycle and are tightly associated with intracellular
membranes. Indirect immunofluorescence revealed that YptV4p, YptV5p and YptV6p
are present in perinuclear regions of the cell, indicating an association with
the Golgi region. Golgi localization of YptV4p and YptV6p in Volvox was confirmed by immunogold electron microscopy. In contrast, we found
Ypt1p associated with the contractile vacuole in both V. carteri and C.
reinhardtii. Furthermore, the YptV proteins were also detected along the entire
length of the flagella of somatic Volvox cells. This
flagellar location was substantiated by western blot analysis of extracts
prepared from isolated flagella of both algae. While localization to exocytic
compartments is in agreement with the established Ypt/Rab function in
intracellular vesicle transport of eukaryotic cells, presence in the algal
flagellum is the first hint of a possible role for small G proteins also in
motility organelles.
Ferris PJ,
Woessner JP, Goodenough UW
A
sex recognition glycoprotein is encoded by the plus mating-type gene fus1 of
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
MOL BIOL CELL 7 (8): 1235-1248 AUG 1996
Abstract:
Sexual fusion between plus and minus gametes of the unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii entails adhesion between plus-specific and minus-specific
''fringe'' proteins displayed on the plasma membrane of gametic mating
structures. We report the identification of the gene (fus1) encoding the plus
fringe glycoprotein, which resides in a unique domain of the mating-type plus (mt(+)) locus, and which was identified by transposon
insertions in three fusion-defective mutant strains. Transformation with fus1(+) restores fringe and fusion competence to these
mutants and to the pseudo-plus mutant imp11 mt(-), defective in minus
differentiation. The fus1 gene is remarkable in lacking the codon bias found in
all other nuclear genes of C. reinhardtii.
Gruber H,
Kirzinger SH, Schmitt R
Expression
of the Volvox gene encoding
nitrate reductase: Mutation-dependent activation of cryptic splice
sites and intron-enhanced gene expression from a cDNA
PLANT MOL BIOL 31 (1): 1-12 APR 1996
Abstract:
Use of the nitrate reductase encoding gene (nitA) as selection marker has
facilitated the successful nuclear transformation of Volvox carteri. The Volvox nitA gene contains 10
introns. A stable nitA mutation in the Volvox recipient strain
153-81 resides in a G-to-A transition of the first nucleotide in the 5' splice
site of nitA intron 2. This mutation resulted in at least three non-functional
splice variants, namely: (1) intron 2 was not spliced at all; (2) a cryptic 5'
splice site 60 nt upstream or (3) a cryptic 5' splice
site 16 nt downstream of the mutation were activated and used for splicing.
When we used nitA cDNA (pVcNR13) for transformation of V. carteri 153-81, a low
efficiency of about 5 x 10(-5) transformants per reproductive cell was observed.
Re-integration of either intron 1 (pVcNR15) or introns 9 and 10 (pVcNR16) in
the transforming cDNA increased transformation rates to 5 x 10(-4). In
parallel, pVcNR15-transformed Volvox exhibited growth
rates that were 100-fold increased over the pVcNR13-transformed alga. This
intron-enhancement of nitA gene expression appears to be associated with
post-transcriptional processing and 'channelling' of the message. These data
suggest an important role of splicing for gene expression in V. carteri.
Agrawal SC,
Sharma UK
Chemical
and biological properties of culture filtrates of Westiellopsis prolifica and
Chaetophora attenuata
ISRAEL J PLANT SCI 44 (1): 43-48 1996
Abstract:
Westiellopsis prolifica Janet and Chaetophora attenunta Hazen cultures released
sugars (glucose, fructose, and sucrose), organic acids (oxaloacetic acid and
oxalic acid), amino acids, and protein. W. prolifica cultures released the amino
acids glycine, serine, cystine, glutamic acid, aspartic acid, and cc-alanine,
while C. attenuata cultures released glycine, serine, aspartic acid, and
cr-alanine. W. prolifica and C. attenuata cultures of all ages released more
extracellular protein than total free amino acids. Cultures of C. attenuata
released more protein than cultures of the same age of W. prolifica. The
filtrates from old cultures of W. prolifica and C. attenunta decreased the
total chlorophyll content of all algae tested, totally suppressed conjugation
in Spirogyra decimina and zoospore formation in C. attenuata, and drastically
decreased spore germination in W. prolifica, thus producing stressful
conditions affecting the growth and reproduction of these and other algae.
Selmer T, Hallmann
A, Schmidt B, et al.
The
evolutionary conservation of a novel protein modification, the conversion of
cysteine to serinesemialdehyde in arylsulfatase from Volvox carteri
EUR J BIOCHEM 238 (2): 341-345 JUN 1 1996
Abstract:
A novel post-translational protein modification has recently been described in
two human sulfatases, by which a cysteine is replaced by a serinesemialdehyde
(2-amino-3-oxopropionic acid) residue [Schmidt, B., Selmer, T., Ingendoh, A.
& von Figura, K. (1995) Cell 82, 271-278]. This cysteine is conserved among
all known eukaryotic sulfatases. Here we report the presence of this
modification in arylsulfatase from the green alga Volvox carteri. The
evolutionary conservation of this novel protein modification between sulfatases
of V. carteri and man lends further support to the assumption that this
modification is required for the catalytic activity of sulfatases and may be
present in all sulfatases of eukaryotic origin.
Sugase Y,
Hirono M, Kindle KL, et al.
Cloning
and characterization of the actin-encoding gene of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii
GENE 168 (1): 117-121 FEB 2 1996
Abstract:
The genomic and complementary DNA sequences were determined for the unique
actin-encoding gene in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr). The deduced amino acid
(aa) sequence of this actin was similar to most known actin sequences, with the
highest identity (98.1%) being with that of Volvox carteri actin.
The Cr actin-encoding gene has one intron in the 5'-untranslated region and
eight introns in the coding region. The latter eight introns occur at the same
positions as those in the V. casteri actin-encoding gene. The 5'-upstream
region contains four short stretches of sequence similar to the so-called 'tub
box', a characteristic sequence proposed to be responsible for the regulation
of synthesis of various axonemal proteins upon deflagellation and during the
cell cycle, Southern blot analysis indicated that the Cr genome has only a
single actin-encoding gene. An antibody specific for the 11-aa peptide
corresponding to the N-terminal sequence of this actin was found to react with
a 43-kDa protein associated with flagellar inner-arm dynein. These findings
indicate that a single actin functions in both the cytoplasm and flagella of
this organism.
Fabry S,
Beyser K
YptV2p,
a membrane-associated small G protein abundant during embryogenesis in the
green alga Volvox carteri
PROTOPLASMA 190 (1-2): 79-87 1996
Abstract:
The multicellular fresh-water alga Volvox carteri contains
at least six small G protein-encoding genes (ypt genes) whose products are
probably involved in intracellular vesicle transport. Four of them, YptV1,
YptV3, YptV4, and YptV5, have been isolated and characterized previously. Here
we report the cloning of yptV2 cDNA, the production of recombinant His-tagged
YptV2p protein (reYptV2p) in E. coli, and the analysis of its GTPase activity
and intracellular localization. YptV2p is predominantly present in dividing Volvox embryos. It is a membrane-associated protein which is localized to the
cell periphery (plasma membrane or plasma-membrane-associated vesicles),
probably by a lipid moiety. Purified, E. coli-expressed YptV2p binds GTP
specifically, and has a typically low intrinsic GTPase activity (k(cat) = 0.004/min), which is enhanced by a GTPase
activating protein activity present in Volvox. Our observations
suggest a role of YptV2p in secretion, with a peak during the rapid cleavages
of the Volvox embryo.
Hallmann A,
Sumper M
The
Chlorella hexose H+ symporter is a useful selectable marker and biochemical
reagent when expressed in Volvox
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 93 (2): 669-673 JAN 23 1996
Abstract:
The multicellular obligately photoautotrophic alga Volvox is composed of only two types of cells, somatic and reproductive,
Therefore, Volvox provides the simplest model
system for the study of multicellularity. Metabolic labeling experiments using
radioactive precursors are crucial for the detection of stage- and
cell-type-specific proteins, glycoproteins, lipids, and carbohydrates. However,
wild-type Volvox lacks import systems for sugars or amino acids. To
circumvent this problem, the hexose/H+ symporter (HUP1) gene from the
unicellular alga Chlorella was placed under the control of the constitutive Volvox beta-tubulin promoter. The corresponding transgenic Volvox strain synthesized the sugar transporter in a functional state and was
able to efficiently incorporate C-14 from labeled glucose or glucosamine.
Sensitivity toward the toxic glucose/mannose analogue 2-deoxyglucose increased
by orders of magnitude in transformants. Thus we report the successful
transformation of Volvox with a gene of heterologous
origin. The chimeric gene may be selected for in either a positive or a
negative manner, because transformants exhibit both prolonged survival in the
dark in the presence of glucose and greatly increased sensitivity to the toxic sugar
2-deoxyglucose. The former trait may make the gene useful as a dominant
selectable marker for use in transformation studies, whereas the latter trait
may make it useful in development of a gene-targeting system.
Nishii I,
Ogihara S
Role
of actomyosin in multicellular deformation: Inversion of Volvox embryos.
MOL BIOL CELL 7: 2219-2219 Suppl. S DEC 1996
Girardin HM,
Pelletier JA, Jovanovic L, et al.
Translational control during the development of Volvox.
MOL BIOL CELL 7: 624-624 Suppl. S DEC 1996
1995
Nozaki H,
Itoh M, Sano R, et al.
Phylogenetic
relationships within the colonial volvocales (Chlorophyta) inferred from rbcL
gene sequence data
J PHYCOL 31 (6): 970-979 DEC 1995
Abstract:
The chloroplast-encoded large subunit of the ribulose-1, 5-bisphosphate
carboxylase/oxygenase (rbcL) gene was sequenced from 20 species of the colonial
Volvocales (the Volvacaceae, Goniaceae, and Tetrabaenaceae) in order to
elucidate phylogenetic relationships within the colonial Volvocales. Eleven
hundred twenty-eight base pairs In the coding regions
of the (rbcL) gene were analyzed by the neighbor-joining (NJ) method using
three kinds of distance estimations, as well as by the maximum parsimony (MP)
method. A large group comprising all the anisogamous and oogamous volvocacean
species was resolved in the MP tree as well as in the NJ trees based on overall
and synonymous substitutions. In all the trees constructed, Basichlamys and
Tetrabaena (Tetrabaenaceae) constituted a very robust phylogenetic group.
Although not supported by high bootstrap values, the MP tree and the NJ tree
based on nonsynonymous substitutions indicated that the Tetrabaenaceae is the
sister group to the large group comprising the Volvocaceae and the Goniaceae.
In addition, the present analysis strongly suggested that Pandorina and
Astrephomene are monophyletic genera whereas Eudorina is nonmonophyletic. These
results are essentially consistent with the results of the recent cladistic
analyses of morphological data. However, the monophyly of the Volvocaceae
previously supported by four morphological synapomorphies is found only in the
NJ tree based on nonsynonymous substitutions (with very low bootstrap values).
The genus Volvox was clearly resolved as a polyphyletic group with V.
rousseletii Pocock separated from other species of volvox in the rbcL gene comparisons, although this genus represents a
monophyletic group in the previous morphological analyses. Furthermore, none of
the rbcL gene trees supported the monophyly of the Goniaceae; Astrephomene was
placed in various phylogenetic positions.
Memon A,
Hwang SB, Deshpande N, et al.
Novel
aspects of the regulation of a cDNA (Arf1) from Chlamydomonas with high
sequence identity to animal ADP-ribosylation factor 1
PLANT MOL BIOL 29 (3): 567-577 NOV 1995
Abstract:
ADP-ribosylation factor (ARF) is a highly conserved, low molecular mass (ca. 21
kDa) GTP-binding protein that has been implicated in vesicle trafficking and
signal transduction in yeast and mammalian cells. However, little is known of
ARF in plant systems. A putative ARF polypeptide was identifed in subcellular
fractions of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, based on [P-32]GTP binding and immunoblot assays. A cDNA clone was
isolated from Chlamydomonas (Arfl), which encodes a 20.7 kDa protein with 90%
identity to human ARF1. Northern blot analyses showed that levels of Arfl mRNA
are highly regulated during 12 h/12 h light/dark (LD) cycles. A biphasic
pattern of expression was observed: a transient peak of Arfl mRNA occurred at
the onset of the light period, which was followed ca. 12 h later by a more
prominent peak in the early to mid-dark period. When LD-synchronized cells were
shifted to continuous darkness, the dark-specific peak of Arfl mRNA persisted,
indicative of a circadian rhythm. The increase in Arfl mRNA at the,beginning of the light period, however, was shown to be
light-dependent, and, moreover, dependent on photosynthesis, since it was
prevented by DCMU. We conclude that the biphasic pattern of Arfl mRNA
accumulation during LD cycles is due to regulation by two different factors,
light (which requires photosynthesis) and the circadian clock. Thus, these
studies identify a novel pattern of expression for a GTP-binding protein gene.
Imaizumi M,
Doida Y
Cyclic
AMP is a signal for repression of differentiation into gametes in Micrasterias
thomasiana var notata
PLANT SCI 112 (1): 33-42 NOV 24 1995
Abstract:
This study investigates the effects of adenosine 3':5'-cyclic monophosphate
(cAMP) and several chemicals which elevate the intracellular level of cAMP on
the induction of zygote formation in Micrasterias thomasiana var. notata. When
added at a concentration of 0.5-3 mM, cAMP repressed the induction of zygotes
and simultaneously promoted cell proliferation, although at a concentration of
0.1 mM it merely delayed the initiation of zygote induction. Methylxanthines
caffeine (0.05-1 mM) and theophylline (0.05-1 mM), forskolin (10 mu M), which
is a potent activator of adenylate cyclase, and a membrane-permeable cAMP
analog, 8-bromo cAMP (0.1-3 mM), also repressed the induction of zygotes and
simultaneously promoted cell proliferation. In contrast, another cAMP analog
used in this study, N-6,O-2'-dibutyryl cAMP (2-3 mM),
repressed the induction of zygotes but did not cause promotion of cell
proliferation. This analog also specifically blocked the cell division directly
involved with gamete formation. The results obtained suggest that intracellular
cAMP may function as a signal which simultaneously represses zygote induction
and causes proliferation of cells in Micrasterias.
DESNITSKI AG
On the origin of Metazoa
ZH OBSHCH BIOL 56 (5): 629-631 SEP-OCT 1995
Abstract:
Under consideration is a new version of the phagocytella conception. It is suggested
to consider blastea not a particular organism but a morphologically variable
taxon of mixotrophic flagellates. Some of its subtaxa might have made a
transition to the true heterotrophy, thus having become direct metazoan
ancestors.
WALTHER Z, HALL
JL
The uni chromosome of
chalmydomonas – histone genes and nucleosome structure.
NUCLEIC ACIDS RES 23 (18): 3756-3763 SEP 25 1995
Abstract:
The uni linkage group (ULG) of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains many genes
involved in the basal body-flagellar system, Recent evidence suggests that the
corresponding uni chromosome is located in close proximity to the basal body
complex. In the course of studies into its molecular organization, we have
found a cluster of four histone genes on the ULG. The genes are arranged as
divergently-transcribed pairs: H3-H4 and H2B-H2A. Genomic sequencing reveals
that these genes lack introns and contain characteristic 3' palindromes similar
to those of animals, The predicted amino acid
sequences are highly conserved across species, with greatest similarities to
the histone genes of Volvox. Southern analysis shows that
each histone gene is present in 15-20 copies in Chlamydomonas and suggests a
dispersed genomic organization. Northern analysis of mitotically-synchronized
cells shows that, like the replication-dependent histones of higher eukaryotes,
Chlamydomonas histone genes are expressed during S-phase. Using a gene-specific
probe on Northern blots, we provide evidence that the
ULG H4 gene is regulated in the same manner as other Chlamydomonas histone
genes. Finally, micrococcal nuclease protection experiments show that the uni
chromosome itself associates with histone proteins and displays a conventional
nucleosomal banding pattern.
FABRY S,
MULLER K, LINDAUER A, et al.
THE
ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE AND REGULATORY ELEMENTS OF CHLAMYDOMONAS HISTONE GENES
REVEAL FEATURES LINKING PLANT AND ANIMAL GENES
CURR GENET 28 (4): 333-345 SEP 1995
Abstract:
The genome of the green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains approximately
15 gene clusters of the nucleosomal (or core) histone H2A, H2B, H3 and H4 genes
and at least one histone H1 gene. Seven non-allelic histone gene loci were
isolated from a genomic library, physically mapped, and the nucleotide
sequences of three isotypes of each core histone gene species and one linked H1
gene determined. The core histone genes are organized in clusters of H2A-H2B
and H3-H4 pairs, in which each gene pair shows outwardly divergent
transcription from a short (< 300 bp) intercistronic region. These
intercistronic regions contain typically conserved promoter elements, namely a
TATA-box and the three motifs TGGCCAGG(G/C)-CGAG,
CGTTGACC and CGGTTG. Different from the genes of higher plants, but like those
of animals and the related alga Volvox, the 3'
untranslated regions contain no poly A signal, but a
palindromic sequence (3' palindrome) essential for mRNA processing is present.
One single H1 gene was found in close linkage to a H2A-H2B pair. The H1
upstream region contains the octameric promoter element GGTTGACC (also found
upstream of the core histone genes) and two specific sequence motifs that are
shared only with the Volvox H1 promoters. This suggests
differential transcription of the H1 and the core histone genes. The H1 gene is
interrupted by two introns. Unlike Volvox H3 genes, the
three sequenced H3 isoforms are intron-free. Primer-directed PCR of genomic DNA
demonstrated, however, that at least 8 of the about 15 H3 genes do contain one
intron at a conserved position. In synchronized C. reinhardtii cells, H4 mRNA
levels (representative of all core histone mRNAs) peak during cell division,
suggesting strict replication-dependent gene control. The derived peptide
sequences place C. reinhardtii core histones closer to plants than to animals,
except that the H2A histones are more animal-like. The peptide sequence of
histone H1 is closely related to the V. carteri VH1-II (66% identity).
Organization of the core histone gene in pairs, and non-polyadenylation of
mRNAs are features shared with animals, whereas peptide sequences and enhancer
elements are shared with higher plants, assigning the volvocalean histone genes
a position intermediate between animals and plants.
DESNITSKI AG
A REVIEW ON THE EVOLUTION OF DEVELOPMENT IN VOLVOX - MORPHOLOGICAL AND PHYSIOLOGICAL-ASPECTS
EUR J PROTISTOL 31 (3): 241-247 AUG 25 1995
Abstract:
This paper presents a morphophysiological concept of the evolution of Volvox development. We use published data concerning differences in size of the
mature gonidia, rates of their division and peculiarities in segregation of
somatic and reproductive cell lines. Based on this, four programmes (types) of
asexual development of Volvox are recognized,
and the evolutionary relationships among these programmes (but not among any
concrete species of Volvox) are elucidated. The first
developmental programme (Volvox powersii - V.
pocockiae) is clearly primitive for the genus. This programme is characterized
by ancestral features: large gonidia, division is fast, and there is no unequal
(asymmetric) division into two cellular types. The second developmental programme(V. carteri), the third programme (V. tertius) and
the fourth programme (V. aureus) are all derived, but constitute different
phylogenetic trends. They each have some derived features: the second programme
involves asymmetric division, the third programm
involves slow division, while the fourth programme involves small gonidia and
slow division. The evolutionary concept is supplemented by data on sexual
reproduction in various species of Volvox.
GODL K,
HALLMANN A, RAPPEL A, et al.
PHEROPHORINS
- A FAMILY OF EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX GLYCOPROTEINS FROM VOLVOX STRUCTURALLY RELATED TO THE SEX-INDUCING PHEROMONE
PLANTA 196 (4): 781-787 JUL 1995
Abstract:
Pherophorins are extracellular matrix (ECM) glycoproteins from Volvox that share homology with the sex-inducing pheromone. A novel pherophorin
(pherophorin III) was characterized both with respect to expression pattern and
proteolytic processing in vivo. Furthermore, it was shown that the pherophorins
represent a protein family of ECM glycoproteins exhibiting a modular
composition: their N-terminally located domain is a homolog of a domain found
in the ECM glycoprotein SSG 185. Together with SSG 185, pherophorin I is a main component of the cellular zone within the ECM. The
Volvox genome contains a tandem arrangement of genes encoding pherophorin II-related
polypeptides. Inhibition of proteolytic processing of pherophorin II and III in
vivo appears to result in the suppression of sexual induction.
DIETMAIER W,
FABRY S, HUBER H, et al.
ANALYSIS
OF A FAMILY OF YPT GENES AND THEIR PRODUCTS FROM CHLAMYDOMONAS-REINHARDTII
GENE 158 (1): 41-50 MAY 26 19
Abstract:
Small G-proteins encoded by the ras-like ypt genes are ubiquitous in eukaryotic
cells. They have been shown to play an essential role in membrane vesicle
transport. We have isolated four ypt genes, yptC1, yptC4, yptC5 and yptC6, from
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (Cr) genomic and cDNA libraries. Three of them,
yptC1, yptC4 and yptC5, are close homologues of ypt genes previously found in
the multicellular alga Volvox carteri (Vc), the
fourth, yptC6, is new. Each yptC gene is present as a single copy in the
genome. Comparisons of genomic and cDNA sequences revealed that the coding
regions are interrupted by five (yptC5), six (yptC6), seven (yptC4) and eight
(yptC1) introns, respectively. Cr ypt genes and the closely related Vc ypt genes have identical exon-intron structures, but the
corresponding intron sequences are completely different. Polyadenylation is
signalled by UAUAA, UGUAG and UGUAA. The deduced amino acid (aa)
sequence of YptC6 exhibited 79% identity with HRab2; YptC1, YptC4 and YptC5
exhibited over 90% identity with their Vc homologues. Primary structures of the
9-aa 'effector domain' and the contiguous 'helix3-loop7' motif (approx. 30 aa) are 'diagnostic' features for functional assignment.
Recombinant YptC proteins, overproduced in Escherichia
coli and purified to near homogeneity, displayed strong and specific binding of
GTP, but not of GMP or ATP. The four Cr Ypt proteins showed immunochemical
cross reactions to their Vc counterparts. Moreover,
Western blots demonstrated at least six types of Ypt in both Cr and Vc, suggesting that these Ypt are used for household
functions responsible for vesicle transport rather than for cellular
differentiation.
VOIGT J,
VOGELER HP, KONIG WA, et al.
CHAOTROPE-SOLUBLE
CELL-WALL GLYCOPROTEINS OF VOLVOX
AND SOME MEMBERS OF THE ZYGNEMATOPHYCEAE IMMUNOLOGICALLY RELATED TO THE 150 KDA
CELL-WALL GLYCOPROTEIN OF CHLAMYDOMONAS-REINHARDTII
MICROBIOL RES 150 (2): 129-137 MAY 1995
Abstract:
As previously described, the cell wall of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii contains
several chaotrope-soluble glycoproteins with similar sugar compositions, but
considerably different proportions of hydroxyproline. All these
hydroxyproline-containing cell wall glycoproteins are recognized by a
polyclonal antibody raised against the purified '150 kDa' cell wall
glycoprotein of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. This antibody also cross-reacts with
some polypeptides present in the LiCl-extracts from intact cells of Spirotaenia
erythrocephala, Spirotaenia obscura, Volvox aureus, and Volvox globator as revealed by Western blot analyses. Therefore, an Ige
fraction of this particular antibody coupled to CNBr-activated Sepharose was
used to isolate the immunologically related polypeptides extracted by aqueous
LiCl from intact cells or cell wall preparations of different green algae
belonging to the Volvocales or to the Zygnematophycene. Different and more or
less complex polypeptide patterns were observed by comparative SDS-PAGE analyses
of the polypeptide fractions isolated by immunoaffinity chromatography from
extracts of Chlamydamonas reinhardtii, Volvox aureus,
Micrasterias rotata, Gonatozygon brebissonii and Netrium digitus, respectively,
whereas the corresponding fraction prepared from Spirotaenia erythrocephala
contained a predominant '160 kDa' component. Amino acid and sugar analyses
revealed that all these polypeptide fractions contained hydroxyproline (1.0-4.5
mol%) and the same sugars as the Chlamydomonas cell
wall glycoproteins. However, the relative amounts of these sugars (arabinose,
galactose, glucose, mannose and xylose) were found to be rather different. The
highest proportion of hydroxyproline (4.5 mol%) and the highest ratio of
arabinose:galactose (4.75:1) were determined for the glycoprotein fraction
isolated from Spirotaenia erythrocephala indicating that at least the
predominant '160 kDa' component is an intrinsic cell wall glycoprotein
containing hydroxyproline and oligo-arabinosyl side chains. All the polypeptide
fractions isolated from the other green algae obviously also contained
chaotropesoluble cell wall glycoproteins as revealed by the presence of
arabinose and hydroxyproline. These findings show that all the investigated
green algae contain chaotrope-soluble cell wall glycoproteins immunologically
related to the '150 kDa' cell wall glycoprotein of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii.
FABRY S,
STEIGERWALD R, BERNKLAU C, et al.
STRUCTURE-FUNCTION
ANALYSIS OF SMALL G-PROTEINS FROM VOLVOX
AND CHLAMYDOMONAS BY COMPLEMENTATION OF SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE YPT/SEC
MUTATIONS
MOL GEN GENET 247 (3): 265-274 MAY 10 1995
Abstract:
cDNAs representing nine small G protein genes encoding Ypt proteins from the
green algae Volvox carteri (YptV) and
Chlamydomonas reinhardtii (YptC) were tested for their ability to complement
mutations in the YPT1, SEC4, and YPT7 genes of Saccharomyces cerevisiae strains
defective in different steps of intracellular vesicle transport. None of the
heterologously expressed algal genes was able to complement mutations in SEC4
or YPT7, but three of them, yptV1, yptC1, and yptV2, restored a YPT1 null mutation. On the amino acid
sequence level, and particularly with respect to known small G protein
specificity domains. YptV1p and YptC1p are the closest algal analogs of
yeast Ypt1p, with 70% overall identity and identical effector regions, but
YptV2p is only 55% identical to Ypt1p, and its effector domain resembles that
of Sec4p. To define more precisely the regions that supply Ypt1p function, six
chimeras were constructed by reciprocal exchange of 68/72-, 122/123-, and
162/163-amino acid segments of the C-terminal regions between YptV1p
(complementing) and YptV3p (non-complementing). Segments containing 68 amino
acids of the hypervariable C-terminal, and 41 residues of the N-terminal region
including the effector region, of YptV1p could be replaced by the corresponding
parts of YptV3p without loss of function in yeast, but exchanges within the
central core destroyed the ability to rescue the YPT1 mutation. Sequence
analysis of ypt1-complementing and -noncomplementing Ypt types suggests that
surface loop3 represents a novel specificity domain of small G proteins.
FELDWISCH O,
LAMMERTZ M, HARTMANN E, et al.
PURIFICATION
AND CHARACTERIZATION OF A CAMP-BINDING PROTEIN OF VOLVOX-CARTERI F NAGARIENSIS IYENGAR
EUR J BIOCHEM 228 (2): 480-489 MAR 1 1995
Abstract:
Two cAMP-binding proteins, cbp1 and cbp2, were purified from the cytoplasm of
the green alga Volvox carteri. Both proteins have a
native molecular mass of 90 kDa as determined by gel filtration. cbp2 was purified to apparent electrophoretic homogeneity,
having a subunit molecular mass of 42 kDa as determined by SDS/PAGE. The cbp1
preparation contains a 42-kDa and a 44-kDa band. The cAMP-binding activity is
not associated with protein kinase activity. Tryptic peptides of cbp2 were
sequenced by automated Edman degradation. Two pairs of peptides differ in one
amino acid only, thus pointing to the presence of isoforms of cbp2. Both
binding proteins differed from the cAMP-specific phosphodiesterases of V.
carteri with respect to charge, molecular mass and binding affinity to
N-6-cAMP-agarose, Reverse-phase chromatography of the bound ligand revealed
that the two binding proteins hydrolyse cAMP to 5'AMP. The binding specificity
of purified cbp1 and cbp2 was probed by a set of modified cAMP derivatives.
Both proteins bind cAMP strictly specifically in the anti conformation;
position 1 and 6 of the adenine moiety and at least one of the exocyclic O
atoms of the ribose cyclic phosphate moiety are essential. 3-Isobutyl-1-methylxanthine
is an effective inhibitor of binding but the natural methylxyanthines are not.
At present it is not clear whether cbp1 and cbp2 are individual proteins or
isoforms of one another.
MILLER SM,
KIRK DL
CHARACTERIZATION
OF A VOLVOX GENE REGULATING
ASYMMETRIC CELL-DIVISION
MOL BIOL CELL 6: 501-501 Suppl. S NOV 1995
1994
MA H
GTP-BINDING
PROTEINS IN PLANTS - NEW MEMBERS OF AN OLD FAMILY
PLANT MOL BIOL 26 (5): 1611-1636 DEC 1994
Abstract:
Regulatory guanine nucleotide-binding proteins (G proteins) have been studied extensively
in animal and microbial organisms, and they are divided into the heterotrimeric
and the small (monomeric) classes. Heterotrimeric G proteins are known to
mediate signal responses in a variety of pathways in animals and simple
eukaryotes, whiole small G proteins perform diverse functions including signal
transduction, secretion, and regulation of cytoskeleton. In recent years,
biochemical analyses have produced a large amount of information on the
presence and possible functions of G proteins in plants. Further, molecular
cloning has clearly demonstrated that plants have both heterotrimeric and small
G proteins. Although the functions of the plant heterotrimeric G proteins are
yet to be determined, expression analysis of an Arabidopsis Ga protein suggests
that it may be involved in the regulation of cell division and differentiation.
In contrast to the very few genes cloned thus far that encode heterotrimeric G
proteins in plants, a large number of small G proteins have been identified by
molecular cloning from various plants. In addition, several plant small G
proteins have been shown to be functional homologues of their counterparts in
animals and yeasts. Future studies using a number of approaches are likely to
yield insights into the role plant G proteins play.
VALIN P,
GOULARD B, SANIELEVICI M
TOPOLOGY
DEPENDENCE IN LATTICE SIMULATIONS OF NONLINEAR PDES ON A MIMD COMPUTER
INT J MOD PHYS C 5 (6): 957-971 DEC 1994
Abstract:
We tested the parallelization of explicit schemes for the solution of
non-linear classical field theories of complex scalar fields which are capable
of simulating; hadronic collisions. Our attention focused on collisions in a
fractional model with a particularly rich inelastic spectrum of final states.
Relativistic collisions of all types were performed by computer on large
lattices (64 to 256 sites per dimension). The stability and accuracy of the
objects were tested by the use of two other methods of solutions:
Pseudo-spectral and semi-implicit. Parallelization of the Fortran
code on a 64-transputer MIMD Volvox machine revealed,
for certain topologies, communication deadlock and less-than-optimum routing
strategies when the number of transputers used was less than the maximum. The
observed speedup, for N transputers in an appropriate topology, is shown to
scale approximately as N, but the overall gain in execution speed, for
physically interesting problems, is a modest 2-3 when compared to
state-of-the-art workstations.
SCHULZE E,
NAGEL S, GAVENIS K, et al.
STRUCTURALLY
DIVERGENT HISTONE H1 VARIANTS IN CHROMOSOMES CONTAINING HIGHLY CONDENSED
INTERPHASE CHROMATIN
J CELL BIOL 127 (6): 1789-1798 Part 2 DEC 1994
Abstract:
Condensed and late-replicating interphase chromatin in the Dipertan insect
Chironomus contains a divergent type of histone H1 with an inserted KAPKAP
repeat that is conserved in single H1 variants of Caenorhabditis elegans and Volvox carteri. H1 peptides comprising the insertion interact specifically with
DNA. The Chironomid Glyptotendipes exhibits a corresponding correlation between
the presence of condensed chromosome sections and the appearance of a divergent
H1 subtype. The centromere regions and other sections of Glyptotendipes
barbipes chromosomes are inaccessible to immunodecoration by anti-H2B and
anti-H1 antibodies one of which is known to recognize nine different epitopes
in all domains of the H1 molecule. Microelectrophoresis of the histones from
manually isolated unfixed centromeres revealed the presence of H1 and core
histones. H1 genes of G. barpipes were sequenced and found to belong to two
groups. H1 II and H1 III are rather similar but differ remarkably from H1 I.
About 30% of the deduced amino acid residues were found to be unique to H1 I.
Most conspicuous is the insertion, SPAKSPGR, in H1 I that is lacking in H1 II
and H1 III and at its position gives rise to the sequence repeat SPAKSPAKSPGR.
The homologous H1 I gene in Glyptotendipes salinus encodes the very similar
repeat TPAKSPAKSPGR. Both sequences are structurally related to the KAPKAP
repeat in H1 I-1 specific for condensed chromosome sites in Chironomus and to
the SPKKSPKK repeat in sea urchin sperm H1, lie at almost the same distance
from the central globular domain, and could interact with linker DNA in
packaging condensed chromatin.
WOESSNER JP,
MOLENDIJK AJ, VANEGMOND P, et al.
DOMAIN
CONSERVATION IN SEVERAL VOLVOCALEAN CELL-WALL PROTEINS
PLANT MOL BIOL 26 (3): 947-960 NOV 1994
Abstract:
Based on our previous work demonstrating that (SerPro)(x) epitopes are common
to extensin-like cell wall proteins in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii, we looked for
similar proteins in the distantly related species C. euganzetos. Using a
polyclonal antiserum against a (SerPro)(10) oligopeptide,
we found distinct sets of stage-specific polypeptides immunoprecipitated from
in vitro translations of C. eugametos RNA. Screening of a C. eugametos cDNA
expression library with the antiserum led to the isolation of a cDNA (WP6)
encoding a (SerPro)(x)-rich multidomain wall protein.
Analysis of a similarly selected cDNA (VSP-3) from a C. reinhardtii cDNA
expression library revealed that it also coded for a (SerPro)(x)-rich
multidomain wall protein. The C-terminal rod domains of VSP-3 and WP6 are highly
homologous, while the N-terminal domains are dissimilar; however, the
N-terminal domain of VSP-3 is homologous to the globular domain of a cell wall
protein from Volvox carteri. Exon shuffling might
be responsible for this example of domain conservation over 350 million years
of volvocalean cell wall protein evolution.
DIETMAIER W,
FABRY S
ANALYSIS
OF THE INTRONS IN GENES ENCODING SMALL G-PROTEINS
CURR GENET 26 (5-6): 497-505 NOV-DEC 19
Abstract:
Because all small G proteins (SGPs) possess a very similar array of structural
and functional domains, they are obvious candidates for examining the
relationships postulated to exist between the exon-intron structure of genes
and the domain structure of the encoded proteins. To address this issue, and to
possibly gain insight into the evolution of their introns, we have analyzed
positions, sizes, and sequences of 125 introns from 28 SGP genes. These introns
were found to be distributed in 60 different locations throughout the aligned
sequences, with a preference for the 5'-half of the genes. More than 50% of the
positions were found to be shared by two or more genes, and genes encoding SGPs
of very similar amino acid sequence (i.e., isotypes) in quite closely related
species tend to have most, or all, of their introns in identical locations,
indicating a common evolutionary origin (homologous introns). However, with few
exceptions, no statistically significant sequence similarity or common folding
motif was found between homologous intron pairs. Only three intron positions
are shared between members of distantly related SGP subfamilies. These three
potentially ancient intron locations fall between
regions encoding alpha-helices or beta-sheets, but two of them interrupt
regions encoding known functional (guanosine-nucleotide-binding) modules.
Intron positions that are occupied only in single genes, or in genes encoding
very similar SGPs, do not show any preferential distribution with respect to
regions encoding structural or functional motifs. This discordance between exon
modules and structural and/or functional protein domains suggests that most, if
not all, introns in modern SGP genes arose by independent insertion events
after diversification of the various SGP subfamilies, and therefore probably
did not participate in the early evolution of these genes.
HALLMANN A,
SUMPER M
REPORTER
GENES AND HIGHLY REGULATED PROMOTERS AS TOOLS FOR TRANSFORMATION EXPERIMENTS IN
VOLVOX-CARTERI
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 91 (24): 11562-11566 NOV 22 1994
Abstract:
The multicellular alga Volvox is an attractive
model for the study of developmental processes. With the recent report of
successful transformation, regulated promoters as well as reporter genes
working in this organism are now required. The Volvox genes encoding
arylsulfatase and the extracellular glycoprotein ISG are strictly regulated.
The former is transcribed only under conditions of sulfur starvation, whereas
the latter operates under extreme developmental control-i.e., it is transcribed
for only a few minutes in Volvox embryos at the
stage of embryonic inversion. The gene encoding the sexual pheromone of Volvox carteri was placed under the control of the arylsulfatase promoter. In
response to sulfur deprivation, V. carteri transformed by this construct
synthesized and secreted biologically active pheromone. In addition, the gene
encoding Volvox arylsulfatase was placed under the control of the
ISG promoter. Transformed algae synthesized arylsulfatase mRNA only during
embryonic inversion. These experiments demonstrate the usefulness of both the
arylsulfatase and the sexual.
WOESSNER JP,
GOODENOUGH UW
VOLVOCINE
CELL-WALLS AND THEIR CONSTITUENT GLYCOPROTEINS - AN EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE
PROTOPLASMA 181 (1-4): 245-258 1994
Abstract:
Similarities in the composition of the extracellular matrix suggest that only
some species of the unicellular Chlamydomonas are closely related to the
colonial and multicellular flagellated members of the family Volvocaceae. The
cell walls from all of the algae in this volvocine group contain a crystalline
layer. This lattice structure can be used as a phylogenetic marker to divide
Chlamydomonas species into distinct classes, only one of which includes the
volvocacean algae. Similarly, not all species of Chlamydomonas are sensitive to
each other's cell wall lytic enzymes, implying divergence of the enzyme's inner
wall substrate. Interspecific reconstitution of the crystalline layer is
possible between C. reinhardtii and the multicellular Volvox carteri, but not between C. reinhardtii and C. eugametos. The
hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins (HRGPs) which make up the crystalline layer
in genera which have a similar crystal structure exhibit many homologies.
Interestingly, the evolutionarily distant cell walls of C. reinhardtii and C.
eugametos also contain some HRGPs displaying a few morphological and amino acid
sequence homologies. The morphological similarities between the flagellar
agglutinins (HRGPs responsible for sexual recognition and adhesion during the
mating reaction) and the cell wall HRGPs leads to the proposal of a superfamily
from which novel HRGPs (designed for self-assembly/recognition) can constantly
evolve. Just as Variations in the wall HRGPs can lead to unique wall
structures, new agglutinins facilitate sexual isolation of new species. Thus,
the HRGPs could emerge as Valuable phylogenetic markers.
HUBER O,
SUMPER M
ALGAL-CAMS
- ISOFORMS OF A CELL-ADHESION MOLECULE IN EMBRYOS OF THE ALGA VOLVOX WITH HOMOLOGY TO DROSOPHILA
FASCICLIN-I
EMBO J 13 (18): 4212-4222 SEP 15 1994
Abstract:
Proof that plants possess homologs of animal adhesion proteins is lacking. In
this paper we describe the generation of monoclonal antibodies that interfere
with cell-cell contacts in the 4-cell embryo of the multicellular alga Volvox carteri, resulting in a hole between the cells. The number of following
cell divisions is reduced and the cell division pattern is altered drastically.
Antibodies given at a later stage of embryogenesis specifically inhibit
inversion of the embryo, a morphogenetic movement that turns the embryo inside
out. Immunofluorescence microscopy localizes the antigen (Algal-CAM) at cell
contact sites of the del eloping embryo.
Algal-CAR I is a protein with a three-domain structure: an N-terminal
extensin-like domain characteristic for plant cell walls and two repeats with
homology to fasciclin I, a cell adhesion molecule involved in the neuronal
development of Drosophila. Alternatively spliced variants of Algal-CAM mRNA
were detected that are produced under developmental control. Thus, Algal-CAM is
the first plant homolog of animal adhesion proteins.
NASS N, MOKA
R, JAENICKE L
ADENYLYL-CYCLASE
FROM THE GREEN-ALGA VOLVOX-CARTERI
F NAGARIENSIS - PARTIAL-PURIFICATION AND CHARACTERIZATION
AUST J PLANT PHYSIOL 21 (5): 613-622 1994
Abstract:
In order to understand changes in cyclic adenylate levels of Volvox carteri during the process of sexual induction, we investigated the
biochemical properties of its membrane-bound adenylyl cyclase. Membrane
preparations possess low levels of Mg2+-dependent or Mn2+-dependent adenylyl
cyclase activity. This activity was solubilised and then purified 7800-fold.
The enzyme detergent complex has an apparent molecular mass of 100 kDa.
Purified preparations contain a major ATP-binding protein of 33 kDa as shown by
affinity labelling. The Mg2+-dependent basal enzyme activity is regulated by
Ca2+, and is highest in the presence of 10(-7) M Ca2+, but is inhibited by Ca2+
above 10(-5) M. La3+ at 10(-4) M also blocks activity. Neither calmodulin nor
its antagonists affect the enzyme activity, nor do the purified preparations
interact with immobilised calmodulin. Further mediators of G-protein action
(NaF, or GTP and its derivatives) and forskolins have no influence on the basal
activity of this plant enzyme. The function of adenylyl cyclase in sexual
induction of Volvox is discussed.
HOOPS HJ,
LONG JJ, HILE ES
FLAGELLAR
APPARATUS STRUCTURE IS SIMILAR BUT NOT IDENTICAL IN VOLVULINA-STEINII,
EUDORINA-ELEGANS, AND PLEODORINA-ILLINOISENSIS (CHLOROPHYTA) - IMPLICATIONS FOR
THE VOLVOCINE EVOLUTIONARY LINEAGE
J PHYCOL 30 (4): 679-689 AUG 1994
Abstract:
The colonial and multicellular members of the Volvocales can be arranged in
order of increasing size and complexity as the ''volvocine series.'' This
series is often assumed to reflect an evolutionary progression. The flagellar
apparatuses of previously examined algae are not consistent with a simple
lineage. The flagellar apparatuses of Astrephomene gubernaculifera Pocock,
Gonium pectorale Muller, Platydorina caudata Kofoid, Volvox rousseletii G. S. West, and V. carteri f. weismannia (Powers) Iyengar
differ from one another, and there is no apparent progression in flagellar
apparatus features from the simple to complex colonial forms. We examined the
flagellar apparatuses of Volvulina steinii Playfair, Eudorina elegans Ehr., and Pleodorina illinoisensis Kofoid and found then to
be similar to one another. The basal bodies ave connected by a distal fiber
that is offset to the anti side of the cell. Two microtubular rootlets
originate on the inside of the basal bodies and extend toward the syn side. The
other two rootlets are oriented perpendicular to the first two and are
anti-parallel to each other. A coarsely striated component underlies the
four-membered rootlets and extends to the basal bodies. A proximal fiber
complex connects the two basal bodies. This complex consists of a branched
striated component on the cis side of each basal body. One part extends toward
the anti side of the cell, while the other extends into a fibrous component
that runs between basal bodies. An additional structure extends in the anti
direction from the trans side of each basal body. A
fibrous component extends past one basal body in all four species. This
component goes past the trans basal body in Volvulina
steinii and the cis basal body in E. elegans and P. illinoisensis. The
flagellar apparatuses of these organisms are similar to those of G. pectorale
and Volvox carteri but different from the other colonial
volvocalean algae examined. The algae examined in this study plus G. pectorale
and V. carteri probably share a common evolutionary history that postdates the
transition from the unicellular to colonial habit. Such a shared evolutionary
history is a requirement of the volvocine hypothesis. However, we have not
observed progressive changes in the flagellar apparatus correlated with
increasing cell number, differentiation, and sexual specialization. Thus, it is
possible, but not certain, that G. pectorale, Volvulina steinii, E. elegans, P.
illinoisensis, and Volvox carteri may form part of a
volvocine lineage.
KIRK DL
GERM-CELL
SPECIFICATION IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
CIBA F SYMP 182: 2-15 1994
Abstract:
Volvox carteri illustrates with diagrammatic clarity Weismann's concept of an
immortal germline that produces a mortal soma that will carry it for a time,
but then perish. Each V. carteri adult consists of about 16 asexual
reproductive cells (gonidia) in the interior of a sphere that consists at its
surface of about 2000 biflagellate somatic cells. When mature, each gonidium
divides to form a juvenile with this same cellular composition. Half-way
through their maturation, juveniles hatch out of the parenteral spheroid,
whereupon parental somatic cells undergo programmed death while juvenile
gonidia prepare for a new round of reproduction. The first visible step in V.
carteri germ-soma differentiation is asymmetric cleavage, which sets apart
large gonidial initials from small somatic initials. Experimental analysis
indicates that it is a difference in size, not any difference in cytoplasmic quality, that determines whether a cell will become germinal
or somatic. Mutational and molecular studies lead to the following model for
the genetic control of the germ-soma dichotomy: first, the gls locus acts to
cause asymmetric division; then large cells activate a set of lag loci that
suppress expression of somatic genes, while small cells activate the regA locus
that suppresses gonidial genes.
SCHIEDLMEIER
B, SCHMITT R, MULLER W, et al.
NUCLEAR
TRANSFORMATION OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 91 (11): 5080-5084 MAY 24 1994
Abstract:
Stable nuclear transformation of Volvox carteri was
achieved using the cloned V. carteri nitA(+) gene (which encodes nitrate
reductase) to complement a nitA(-) mutation. Following bombardment of mutant
cells with plasmid-coated gold particles, putative transformants able to
utilize nitrate as a nitrogen source were recovered with an efficiency of
approximate to 2.5 x 10(-5). DNA analysis indicated that the plasmid integrated
into the genome, often in multiple copies, at sites other than the nitA locus.
Cotransformants were recovered with a frequency of 40-80% when cells were
cobombarded with a selected and an unselected marker. Thus, V. carteri becomes
one of the simplest multicellular organisms that is
accessible to detailed molecular studies of genes regulating cellular
differentiation and morphogenesis.
KOUFOPANOU V
THE
EVOLUTION OF SOMA IN THE VOLVOCALES
AM NAT 143 (5): 907-931 MAY 1994
Abstract:
The presence of soma and the manner in which it segregates from the germ line
is a fundamental aspect of development. This article examines the origin and
evolution of soma in the Volvocales, the flagellated forms of green algae by
analyzing data on cell division and development of 370 species. Phylogenetic
analysis suggests that the cell wall is a preadaptation for the evolution of
large multicellular colonies with deterministic development. The allometry of
soma and germ supports the idea that soma functions to provide functional
flagella during the embryogenesis of large colonies (Volvocaceae). The need for
soma arises from a constraint that prevents simultaneous flagellation and cell
division of cells surrounded by rigid walls: basal bodies cannot remain
attached to their flagella while migrating to the mitotic poles. The
con-straint is different from those that may cause the separation of
flagellation and cell division in metazoan cells. Apart from a few
developmental variations, which may represent adaptations to larger size, the
Volvocaceae can be obtained by heterochronic changes in the timing of cell
division. Their small size compared to the size of nonflagellated relatives can
be attributed to their locomotion by flagella, which limits the maximum amount
of germ that can be carried by the soma. This limitation is manifested in a
negative correlation between size and number of germ cells among the largest
species of Volvocaceae (Volvox). the opposite of a positive one among the smaller species.
NOZAKI H,
ITOH M
PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS
WITHIN THE COLONIAL VOLVOCALES (CHLOROPHYTA) INFERRED FROM CLADISTIC-ANALYSIS
BASED ON MORPHOLOGICAL DATA
J PHYCOL 30 (2): 353-365 APR 1994
Abstract:
A cladistic analysis was used to deduce the
phylogenetic relationships within the colonial Volvocales. Forty-one pairs of
characters related to gross morphology and ultrastructure of vegetative
colonies as well as asexual and sexual reproduction were analyzed based on
parsimony, using the PAUP 3.0 computer program, for 25 species belonging to
nine volvocacean and goniacean genera of the colonial Volvocales. Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii Dangeard was the outgroup. The strict
consensus tree indicated the presence of two monophyletic groups, one composed
of all the volvocacean species analyzed in this study and the other containing
the goniacean species except for the four-celled species Gonium sociale
(Dujardin) Warming. In addition, these two groups constitute a large
monophyletic group, to which G. sociale is a sister group. A new combination
Tetrabaena socialis (Dujardin) Nozaki et Itoh and a
new family Tetrabaenaceae Nozaki et Itoh are thus proposed for G. sociale. In
addition, the analysis suggests that the volvocacean genera Eudorina and
Pleodorina are paraphyletic groups, respectively, and that the monotypic genus
Yamagishiella has no autapomorphic characters and represents primitive features
of the anisogamous and oogamous genera of the Volvocaceae. Phylogenetic
relationships within the Volvocaceae and the Goniaceae, as well as the various
modes of sexual reproduction exhibited by these organisms, are discussed on the
basis of the analysis.
HALLMANN A,
SUMPER M
AN
INDUCIBLE ARYLSULFATASE OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
WITH PROPERTIES SUITABLE FOR A REPORTER-GENE SYSTEM - PURIFICATION,
CHARACTERIZATION AND MOLECULAR-CLONING
EUR J BIOCHEM 221 (1): 143-150 APR 1 1994
Abstract:
The multicellular green flagellate Volvox carteri synthesizes a
periplasmic arylsulfatase in response to sulfur deprivation. The inducible
enzyme has been purified to homogeneity and characterized. The corresponding
gene and cDNA have been cloned. Determination of the sequence of genomic clones
and comparisons to the cDNA sequence, revealed sixteen introns and seventeen a exons that encode a 649-amino-acid polypeptide chain.
Since the arylsulfatase enzyme is readily assayed using chromogenic substrates,
but is not detectable in cells grown in sulfate-containing medium, the gene
encoding arylsulfatase may be useful as a reporter gene in V. carteri. In
addition, the highly regulated promoter of the arylsulfatase gene suggests its
suitability as a tool for producing inducible expression vectors for cloned
genes.
SEKIMOTO H,
SONE Y, FUJII T
REGULATION
OF EXPRESSION OF THE GENES FOR A SEX-PHEROMONE BY AN INDUCER OF THE
SEX-PHEROMONE IN THE CLOSTERIUM PERACEROSUM-STRIGOSUM-LITTORALE COMPLEX
PLANTA 193 (1): 137-144 MAR 1994
Abstract:
A sex pheromone, protoplast-release-inducing protein (PR-IP), of the Closterium
peracerosum-strigosum-littorale complex is known to induce the release of
protoplasts from mating-type minus (Mt(-)) cells during sexual reproduction and
to have two subunit polypeptides of 19 and 42 kDa. Here, we describe the
regulation mechanism for the release of the PR-IP. The sex pheromone was
fractionated to yield subunits of 19 and 42 kDa, respectively, and each subunit
was treated with V8 protease and with CNBr. By reference to the partial
amino-acid sequences of the digested polypeptides, oligo nucleotides were
synthesized and used as primers for the combined reverse
transcription-polymerase chain reaction. Amplified fragments of DNA, of 130 bp
in the case of the 19-kDa subunit and of 330 bp in the case of the 42-kDa
subunit, were obtained, sequenced, and used as probes to identify the
respective transcripts. From the results of Northern hybridization, the sizes
of transcripts were estimated to be 1.2 kb for the 18-kDa subunit and 1.4 kb
for the 42-kDa subunit. These transcripts appeared transiently only when
mating-type plus (mt(+)) cells were treated with
another sex pheromone (PR-IP Inducer) for more than 4h in the light. By
immunoblotting with anti-42-kDa-subunit antiserum, it was shown that PR-IP
accumulated gradually in the medium but not in the mt(+)
cells after treatment with PR-IP Inducer in the light. We suggest that PR-IP is
synthesized de novo and secreted from mt(+) cells only
after the perception of PR-IP Inducer that has been released from mt(-) cells
in the light during the sexual reproduction of Closterium, An analysis by
genomic Southern hybridization revealed that probes for the 19-kDa and 42-kDa
peptides hybridized to 6.8-kb and 5.1-kb DNA fragments, respectively, after the
digestion of the genome with EcoRI. These hybridized DNA fragments were
obtained not only from the genome of mt(+) cells but
also from the genome of mt(-) cells, in which no transcripts for PR-IP could be
detected by Northern hybridization. On the basis of these results, we discuss
the possibility that the expression of the gene for the two subunits of PR-IP
might be critically dependent upon the action of putative sex-determining
genes.
SCHIEDLMEIER
B, SCHMITT R
REPETITIOUS
STRUCTURE AND TRANSCRIPTION CONTROL OF A POLYUBIQUITIN GENE IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
CURR GENET 25 (2): 169-177 FEB 1994
Abstract:
Southern analysis indicated the presence of at least four ubiquitin gene loci
in the Volvox carteri genome. Three of these, a polyubiquitin gene
described here and a non-segregating ubiquitin gene pair, were assigned to two
different linkage groups by RFLP mapping; the non-polymorphic fourth gene locus
remained unassigned. The polyubiquitin gene was cloned and its 2,116-bp
sequence determined. It contains six exons each interrupted by an intron at
Gly35, and it encodes a pentameric polyubiquitin polypeptide consisting of five
runs of 76 identical amino-acid residues and a C-terminal extension of one
leucine. The five tandem repeats of coding units plus introns exhibit an
unusually high degree of overall sequence identity indicating an efficient
process of gene homogenization in this region of the V. carteri genome. S1
mapping revealed two closely-spaced transcription starts, 24 and 28 nucleotides
downstream from a putative TATA sequence. Preceding the TATA box are two 14-bp
conserved heat-shock elements (HSEs) and two octameric sequences closely
resembling an yeast HSE. Consistent with a 1.6-kb
transcript seen on Northern blots are two polyadenylation signals (TGTAA)
located 99 bp and 169 bp downstream from the TGA translational stop. The
polyubiquitin gene was transcribed throughout the Volvox life cycle with peaks in the 1.6-kb mRNA levels during pre-cleavage,
cleavage, and post-inversion. In contrast, an 0.6-kb
monoubiquitin transcript was abundant only at the pre-cleavage stage suggesting
a different type of gene control. Heat shock increased the level of
polyubiquitin mRNA, whereas the level of monoubiquitin mRNA was down-regulated.
1993
KOUFOPANOU V,
BELL G
SOMA
AND GERM - AN EXPERIMENTAL APPROACH USING VOLVOX
P ROY SOC LOND B BIO 254 (1340): 107-113 NOV 22 1993
Abstract:
The separation of soma from germ may have originated as a result of a
specialization in source and sink, with somatic cells acting as sources,
gathering nutrients from the external environment and germ cells as sinks,
utilizing nutrients to grow and reproduce. This hypothesis can be tested in an
organism, such as Volvox, where single germ cells can
be cultured in isolation from the soma, thus serving both as source and sink,
and their growth compared with that of germ cells with an intact soma where
source and sink are separated into different cells. Results from such an
experiment show that germ cells grown with an intact soma had greater rates of
increase than those grown with disrupted soma or that were completely isolated,
but the difference became greater as nutrient concentration increased, as
predicted by the source-and-sink hypothesis. The advantage, however, was not
sufficient to compensate fully for the initial investment in soma, especially
at low nutrients, perhaps due to the energetic cost of swimming. In nature,
species with segregated soma are found in nutrient-rich lakes and ponds. In
experimental farm ponds, the biomass of such species increases with
eutrophication more than the biomass of related species without division of
labour, suggesting an advantage consistent with the source-and-sink.
MAIER I
GAMETE
ORIENTATION AND INDUCTION OF GAMETOGENESIS BY PHEROMONES IN ALGAE AND PLANTS
PLANT CELL ENVIRON 16 (8): 891-907 NOV 1993
Abstract:
This review attempts to give a concise overview of the widespread occurrence
and the significance, structure and function of pheromones in the chemical
communication between individuals of the same species during sexual
reproduction in algae and plants. Also included is information on the Oomyctes
and the chytridiomycete Allomyces. The terminology in respect of pheromone
function and pheromone-induced reactions is discussed.
VONGROMOFF
ED, BECK CF
GENES
EXPRESSED DURING SEXUAL-DIFFERENTIATION OF CHLAMYDOMONAS-REINHARDTII
MOL GEN GENET 241 (3-4): 415-421 NOV 1993
Abstract:
Four genes specifically expressed during gametogenesis of Chlamydomonas
reinhardtii have been cloned and their expression patterns analyzed. mRNAs encoded by these gamete-specific genes (gas) were
absent or present only at very low levels in vegetative cells and mature
zygotes. In young zygotes 2 h after gamete fusion, the mRNAs of three gas genes
still persisted. The gas mRNAs accumulated during gametic differentiation. The
temporal patterns of accumulation of individual mRNAs differed; some started to
increase early during gametogenesis, others accumulated in the late phase. The
accumulation of one of the late mRNAs (gas28) was stricly light-dependent. To
illustrate the utility of the genes cloned in the analysis of sexual
differentiation in Chlamydomonas reinhardtii we show that in a
gametogenesis-defective mutant, the expression of late genes is prevented while
that of early genes is normal.
MEMON AR,
HERRIN DL, THOMPSON GA
INTRACELLULAR
TRANSLOCATION OF A 28-KDA GTP-BINDING PROTEIN DURING OSMOTIC SHOCK-INDUCED
CELL-VOLUME REGULATION IN DUNALIELLA-SALINA
BIOCHIM BIOPHYS ACTA 1179 (1): 11-22 OCT 7 1993
Abstract:
The primary aim of this study was to determine if small GTP-binding proteins
play a role in the conspicuous and much-examined volume control process in
Dunaliella salina. We confirmed the previous identification by Rodriguez et al.
(Rodriguez Rosales, M.P., Herrin, D.L. and Thompson, G.A., Jr. (1992) Plant
Physiol. 98, 446-451) of small GTP-binding proteins in the green alga
Dunaliella salina and revealed the presence of at least five such proteins,
having molecular masses of approx. 21, 28, 28.5, 29 and 30 kDa. These proteins
were concentrated largely in the endoplasmic reticulum (ER) and in an
intermediate density organelle fraction (GA) containing mainly Golgi vesicles,
mitochondria and flagella. The chloroplast fraction and plasma membrane
contained the 28-kDa GTP-binding protein exclusively, while the cytosol
contained both the 28-kDa component and small amounts of a 21-kDa GTP-binding
protein. Immunodetection analysis showed that the D. salina 28-kDa protein
cross-reacted strongly with a polyclonal antibody raised against a Volvox carteri yptV1 type GTP-binding protein. This antibody was utilized for
quantitative GTP-binding protein measurements as described below. Certain
anti-GTP-binding protein antibodies derived from non-plant sources, namely,
monoclonal antibodies raised against yeast and mouse ypt1 GTP-binding proteins,
cross-reacted not only with the D. salina 28-kDa protein but also the 29-kDa
component. The 30-kDa GTP-binding protein of D. salina did not bind the
antibodies mentioned above but did cross-react with an anti-yeast ypt1
polyclonal antibody. None of the D. salina GTP-binding proteins reacted
positively with polyclonal antibodies raised against SEC4, rab1 or rab6
proteins. When D. salina cells were subjected to hypoosmotic swelling by
abruptly reducing the NaCl concentration of their medium from 1.7 M to 0.85 M,
the increase in cell surface area was accompanied by a substantial
translocation of the 28-kDa GTP-binding protein from the ER and GA fractions to
the plasma membrane, chloroplast and cytosolic fractions, as determined by
quantitative [P-32]GTP binding and [I-125]antibody
binding on nitrocellulose blots. This translocation increased the content of
the 28-kDa component in the plasma membrane, chloroplast and cytosol by
3-4-fold. No net movement of the 30-kDa GTP-binding protein from either the ER
or GA fractions was observed following hypoosmotic shock. We also examined the
behavior of D. salina small GTP-binding proteins following exposure of cells to
hyperosmotic shock. Increasing the NaCl concentration from 1.7 M to 3.4 M led
within 8 min to a decrease in 28-kDa GTP-binding protein content in ER, GA,
plasma membrane and chloroplasts, and a concurrent increase in the cytosol. The
pattern of change differed from that seen following hypoosmotic shock, where
the plasma membrane and chloroplast fractions, as well as the cytosol gained
28-kDa GTP-binding protein during accelerated membrane vesicle trafficking. It
appears that hyperosmotic shock, by interrupting vesicular trafficking,
releases the 28-kDa GTP-binding proteins from their membrane associations. Two
less abundant GTP-binding proteins were also redistributed following
hyperosmotic shock. A 30-kDa component of microsomes decreased in amount, but
only after 8 min of shock. And a barely detectable 21-kDa band present in
organelle fractions was slowly released into the cytosol, becoming relatively
prominent there by 30 min. Our findings suggest a role for small GTP-binding
proteins in osmoregulatory volume control by D. salina.
KIRK MM,
RANSICK A, MCRAE SE, et al.
THE
RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN CELL-SIZE AND CELL FATE IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
J CELL BIOL 123 (1): 191-208 OCT 199
Abstract:
In Volvox carteri development, visibly asymmetric cleavage
divisions set apart large embryonic cells that will become asexual reproductive
cells (gonidia) from smaller cells that will produce terminally differentiated
somatic cells. Three mechanisms have been proposed to explain how asymmetric
division leads to cell specification in Volvox: (a) by a direct
effect of cell size (or a property derived from it) on cell specification, (b)
by segregation of a cytoplasmic factor resembling germ plasm into large cells,
and (c) by a combined effect of differences in cytoplasmic quality and
cytoplasmic quantity. In this study a variety of V carteri embryos with
genetically and experimentally altered patterns of development were examined in
an attempt to distinguish among these hypotheses. No evidence was found for
regionally specialized cytoplasm that is essential for gonidial specification.
In all cases studied, cells with a diameter > approximately 8 mum at the end
of cleavage-no matter where or how these cells had been produced in the
embryo-developed as gonidia. Instructive observations in this regard were
obtained by three different experimental interventions. (a) When heat shock was
used to interrupt cleavage prematurely, so that presumptive somatic cells were
left much larger than they normally would be at the end of cleavage, most cells
differentiated as gonidia. This result was obtained both with wild-type embryos
that had already divided asymmetrically (and should have segregated any
cytoplasmic determinants involved in cell specification) and with embryos of a
mutant that normally produces only somatic cells. (b) When individual wild-type
blastomeres were isolated at the 16-cell stage, both the anterior blastomeres
that normally produce two gonidia each and the posterior blastomeres that
normally produce no gonidia underwent modified cleavage patterns and each
produced an average of one large cell that developed as a gonidium. (c) When
large cells were created microsurgically in a region of the embryo that
normally makes only somatic cells, these large cells became gonidia. These data
argue strongly for a central role of cell size in germ/soma specification in Volvox carteri, but leave open the question of how differences in cell size are
actually transduced into differences in gene expression.
FABRY S,
JACOBSEN A, HUBER H, et al.
STRUCTURE,
EXPRESSION, AND PHYLOGENETIC-RELATIONSHIPS OF A FAMILY OF YPT GENES ENCODING
SMALL G-PROTEINS IN THE GREEN-ALGA VOLVOX-CARTERI
CURR GENET 24 (3): 229-240 SEP 1993
Abstract:
In addition to the previously described gene yptV1 encoding a small G-protein
we have now identified and sequenced four more ras-related ypt genes
(yptV2-yptV5) from the green alga Volvox carteri. The four
new genes encode polypeptides consisting of 203 to 217 amino-acid residues that
contain the typical sequence elements (GTP-binding domains, effector domain) of
the ypt/rab subgroup of the Ras superfamily. Comparison of the derived
amino-acid sequences from the V carteri ypt gene products and their Ypt
homologs from other species revealed similarity values ranging from 60% to 85%,
whereas intraspecies similarities were found to approach only 55%. The coding
sequences are interrupted by 5-7 introns of variable size (70-1000 nucleotides)
occupying different positions in the genes. Reverse-transcribed samples of
stage-specific RNAs were PCR-amplified with primers specific to yptV1, yptV3,
yptV4, and yptV5 to determine if yptV transcription might be restricted to
either cell type or to a specific stage of the life cycle. These experiments
demonstrated that each of these genes is expressed throughout the entire Volvox life cycle and in both the somatic and the reproductive cells of the
alga. The transcription start sites of yptV1 and yptV5 were mapped by primer
extension. Expression of recombinant yptV cDNA in E. coli yielded recombinant
proteins that bound GTP specifically, demonstrating a property which is typical
for small G-proteins. The derived YptV polypeptide sequences were used to group
them into four distinct classes of Ras-like proteins. These are the first
proteins of the Ras superfamily to be identified in a green alga. We discuss
the possible. role of the YptV-proteins in the
intracellular vesicle transport of Volvox.
MILLER SM,
SCHMITT R, KIRK DL
JORDAN,
AN ACTIVE VOLVOX TRANSPOSABLE
ELEMENT SIMILAR TO HIGHER-PLANT TRANSPOSONS
PLANT CELL 5 (9): 1125-1138 SEP 1993
Abstract:
We have isolated a 1595-bp transposable element from the multicellular green
alga Volvox carteri following its insertion into the nitrate
reductase (nitA) locus. This element, which we have named Jordan, has short
(12-bp) terminal inverted repeats and creates a 3-bp
target site duplication, like some higher plant transposons of the classic
type. Contained within the first 200 bp of one end of the element are 55-bp
inverted repeats, one of which begins with the terminal inverted repeat.
Revertants of the transposon insertion into the nitA locus were obtained at a
rate of approximately 10(-4) per Volvox embryo per
generation. In each revertant examined, all transposon sequences were
completely excised, but footprints containing both sets of duplicated bases, in
addition to three to nine extra bases, were left behind. Jordan contains no
significant open reading frames and so appears to be nonautonomous. DNA gel
blot analysis indicates that Jordan is a member of a
large family of homologous elements in the Volvox genome. We have
isolated and characterized several of these homologs and found that they
contain termini very similar to those of Jordan. Efforts to
utilize Jordan and its homologs as tools to tag and clone developmentally interesting
genes of Volvox are discussed.
HSU JP, HSU
WC, TSAO HK
DIFFUSION-ENHANCED
BIOREACTIONS - A HYPOTHETICAL MECHANISM FOR PLANT-CELL AGGREGATION
B MATH BIOL 55 (5): 869-889 SEP 1993
Abstract:
We show that the existence of diffusional resistance due to the presence of a
solid phase can have a positive effect on the metabolic reactions of plant
cells. In this case the efficiency of metabolic reactions, defined as the ratio
of rate of production of biomass of aggregated cells/rate of production of
biomass of dispersed cells. can be greater than unity
for a certain range of aggregate sizes for both so[id spheres (common plant
cell aggregates) and hollow spheres (e.g. Volvox aggregates). This
means that, under appropriate conditions, plant cells tend to stay in the
aggregated form to improve the efficiency of their metabolic reactions. The
result of the present analysis provides an explanation as to why aggregates of
plant cells are observed under typical culture conditions.
LINDAUER A,
MULLER K, SCHMITT R
2
HISTONE H1-ENCODING GENES OF THE GREEN-ALGA VOLVOX-CARTERI WITH FEATURES INTERMEDIATE BETWEEN PLANT AND ANIMAL
GENES
GENE 129 (1): 59-68 JUL 15 1993
Abstract:
Southern hybridization indicated the presence of at least two and possibly four
histone H1-encoding genes occurring as singlets in the Volvox carteri genome. Two of these genes, H1-I and H1-II, have been cloned and
characterized. Their coding sequences are each interrupted by three introns,
but only the position of the second intron is identically conserved in both
H1-I and H1-II. The encoded 260-amino-acid (aa) (H1-1)
and 240-aa (H1-II) polypeptides possess the typical tripartite organization of
animal H1 histones, with variable N- and C-terminal domains flanking a
conserved 'globular' DNA-binding domain. Extensive differences in their
variable regions suggest that H1-I and H1-II(62%
identity) represent two isotypes with different functions. A prominent
KAPKAP-KAA motif in the H1-I N-terminal region, similarly seen in single H1
variants of a mosquito and a nematode, has a putative function in packing
condensed subtypes of chromatin. Different from higher plants, but like
animals, the H1 genes of V. carteri possess a typical 3' palindrome for mRNA
processing, resulting in non-polyadenylated mRNAs. Transcription initiates 33
nucleotides (nt) (H1-I) and 26 nt (H1-II) downstream
of typical TATA boxes. A putative 20-bp conserved enhancer element upstream of
each TATA box closely resembles the consensus sequence associated with the
nucleosomal histone-encoding genes in V. carteri [Muller et al., Gene 93 (1990)
167-175] and suggests stringent regulation. Accordingly, transcription of H1
was shown to be restricted to late embryogenesis, when new flagella are
produced. We discuss the inferred accessory role of histone H1 proteins in
stabilizing axonemal microtubules, as has been recently observed in sea urchin
flagella [Multigner et al., Nature 360 (1992) 33-39].
WAFFENSCHMIDT
S, WOESSNER JP, BEER K, et al.
ISODITYROSINE
CROSS-LINKING MEDIATES INSOLUBILIZATION OF CELL-WALLS IN CHLAMYDOMONAS
PLANT CELL 5 (7): 809-820 JUL 1993
Abstract:
Enzymatic removal of the cell wall vegetative Chlamydomonas reinhardtii cells
to transcribe wall genes and synthesize new hydroxyproline-rich glycoproteins
(HRGPs) related to the extensins found in higher plant cell walls. A cDNA
expression library made from such induced cells was screened with antibodies to
an oligopeptide containing the (SP)x repetitive
domains found in Chlamydomonas wall proteins. One of the selected cDNAs encodes
an (SP)x-rich polypeptide that also displays a
repeated YGG motif Ascorbate, a peroxidase inhibitor, and tyrosine derivatives
were shown to inhibit insolubilization of both the vegetative and zygotic cell
walls of Chlamydomonas, suggesting that oxidative cross-linking of tyrosines is
occurring. Moreover, insolubilization of both walls was concomitant with a
burst in H2O2 production and in extracellular peroxidase activity. Finally,
both isodityrosine and dityrosine were found in hydrolysates of the
insolubilized vegetative wall layer. We propose that the formation of tyrosine
cross-links is essential to Chlamydomonas HRGP insolubilization.
DESNITSKI AG
ON THE ORIGINS AND EARLY EVOLUTION OF MULTICELLULARITY
BIOSYSTEMS 29 (2-3): 129-132 1993
Abstract:
In this paper an attempt is made to consider the significance of recent data on
the organization and development of Volvox, a multicellular
spheroidal green alga, for the unsolved problem of metazoan origins. A brief
analysis is made of differences and similarities in some trends and principles
during the establishment of metazoan and volvocalean multicellularity.
FODINGER M,
ORTNER S, PLAIMAUER B, et al.
PATHOGENIC
ENTAMOEBA-HISTOLYTICA - CDNA CLONING OF A HISTONE H3 WITH A DIVERGENT PRIMARY
STRUCTURE
MOL BIOCHEM PARASIT 59 (2): 315-322 JUN 1993
Abstract:
Entamoeba histolytica has an unusual nuclear structure characterized by a low
degree of chromatin condensation and the absence of stainable metaphase
chromosomes. Although nucleosome-like particles were observed, no information
about histones was available so far. In this paper we describe a cDNA clone
with significant homology to H3 histones that was isolated from a library of
pathogenic E. histolytica.
The complete
cDNA encodes a 15-kDa polypeptide, which like the histone sequence from Volvox
carteri is shorter by one residue than the human homologue. The amino acid
sequence has only 69% identity with human H3.3 histone and 67% identity with
the human H3.1 histone. This is the highest degree of sequence divergence
observed for any eukaryote H3 histone sequence. Our results indicate that this
divergence may contribute to the unusual chromatin structure of E. histolytica.
JOSHI S,
MILLER MI
MAXIMUM
A POSTERIORI ESTIMATION WITH GOOD ROUGHNESS FOR
3-DIMENSIONAL OPTICAL-SECTIONING MICROSCOPY
J OPT SOC AM A 10 (5): 1078-1085 MAY 1993
Abstract:
The three-dimensional image-reconstruction problem solved here for optical-sectioning
microscopy is to estimate the fluorescence intensity lambda(x), where x
is-an-element-of R3, given a series of Poisson counting process measurements
{M(j)(dx)}j=1J, each with intensity s(j)(y) integral(R3)p(j)(y\x)lambda(x)dx,
with p(j)(y\x) being the point spread of the optics focused to the jth plane
and s(j)(y) the detection probability for detector point y at focal depth j. A
maximum a posteriori reconstruction generated by inducing a prior distribution
on the space of images via Good's three-dimensional rotationally invariant
roughness penalty integral(R3)[\DELTAlambda(x)\2/lambda(x)]dx.
It is proven that the sequence of iterates that is generated by using the
expectation maximization algorithm is monotonically increasing in posterior
probability, with stable points of the iteration satisfying the necessary
maximizer conditions of the maximum a posteriori solution. The algorithms were
implemented on the DECmpp-SX, a 64 x 64 parallel processor, running at <2 s/(64(3), 3-D iteration). Results are demonstrated from
simulated as well as amoebae and volvox data. We study
performance comparisons of the algorithms for the missing-data problems
corresponding to fast data collection for rapid motion studies in which every
other focal plane is removed and for imaging with limited detector areas and
efficiency.
LINDAUER A,
FRASER D, BRUDERLEIN M, et al.
REVERSE-TRANSCRIPTASE
FAMILIES AND A COPIA-LIKE RETROTRANSPOSON, OSSER, IN THE GREEN-ALGA VOLVOX-CARTERI
FEBS LETT 319 (3): 261-266 MAR 22 1993
Abstract:
By using the polymerase chain reaction (PCR) we have isolated and sequenced two
distinct families of reverse transcriptase (RT) sequences from the genome of
the colonial alga, Volvox carteri. Probing a genomic
library with these RT clones revealed copia-like retrotransposons. One of these
elements, named Osser, is 4,875 bp long, bordered by 197-bp identical long
terminal repeats (LTRs), and shows the typical organization of retrotransposons
belonging to the copia-Ty1 group. This is the first complete copia-like
retrotransposon sequence described in a green alga.
SUMPER M,
BERG E, WENZL S, et al.
HOW
A SEX-PHEROMONE MIGHT ACT AT A CONCENTRATION BELOW 10(-16) M
EMBO J 12 (3): 831-836 MAR 1993
Abstract:
The sex-inducing pheromone of Volvox carteri is a
glycoprotein that triggers development of males and females at a concentration
below 10(-16) M. Evidence is presented for the existence of a novel mechanism
of signal amplification operating within the extracellular matrix of this
multicellular organism. A family of 70 kDa matrix glycoproteins denoted pherophorins
bear a C-terminal domain being homologous to the sex-inducing pheromone. Under
the influence of the pheromone, this domain is liberated by highly specific
proteolysis.
SEKIMOTO H,
SATOH S, FUJII T
ANALYSIS
OF BINDING OF BIOTINYLATED PROTOPLAST-RELEASE-INDUCING PROTEIN THAT INDUCES
RELEASE OF GAMETIC PROTOPLASTS IN THE CLOSTERIUM-PERACEROSUM-STRIGOSUM-LITTORALE
COMPLEX
PLANTA 189 (3): 468-474 MAR 1993
Abstract:
A protoplast-release-inducing protein (PR-IP) which is released from
mating-type plus (mt+) cells and induces the release of gametic protoplasts
from mating-type minus (mt-) cells of Closterium was biotinylated and then used
to examine the interaction of this protein with mt- cells. The
protoplast-release-inducing activity of PR-IP was not altered after the
biotinylation. When mt- cells that had been pre-cultured for 24 h were
incubated with biotinylated PR-IP for 6 h in nitrogen-deficient medium that
contained 1 % (w/v) bovine serum albumin, and then washed with the same medium,
only a 19-kDa polypeptide, the smaller subunit of PR IP, was detected in cells
by the avidin and biotinylated horseradish-peroxidase macromolecular complex
system. The amount of bound 19-kDa polypeptide increased with increasing doses
of PR-IP and reached a maximum at around 10 nM, reflecting the
protoplast-release-inducing activity. From a Scatchard plot, the dissociation
constant of the polypeptide was calculated to be 2.7 .
10(-8) M. The binding of the polypeptide proceeded
only after an appropriate period of pre-culture in the light, and the
polypeptide was competitively displaced by non-biotinylated PR-IP. From these results,
it appears that the PR-IP induces the release of protoplasts from mt- cells by
binding of a polypeptide of relative molecular mass 19000 to the receptor on
the cell surface in a manner analogous to the binding of peptide hormones in
animals.
KIM GH, FRITZ
L
A
SIGNAL GLYCOPROTEIN WITH ALPHA-D-MANNOSYL RESIDUES IS INVOLVED IN THE
WOUND-HEALING RESPONSE OF ANTITHAMNION-SPARSUM (CERAMIALES, RHODPHYTA)
J PHYCOL 29 (1): 85-90 FEB 1993
Abstract:
A variety of fluorescein isothiocyanate-labeled lectins specific for different
sugar moieties were examined as probes for the wound-healing response in the
filamentous red alga Antithamnion sparsum Tokida. Among them, only concanavalin
A (ConA) and Lens culrinaris agglutinin (LCA), which have specificity to
alpha-D-mannosyl residues, bound specifically to repair cells during the
wound-healing process. When ConA or LCA was added at various time intervals
after wounding, it first bound (3 h post-wounding) as a thin layer at the tips
of the adjacent cells. Later (4-5 h post-wounding) labeling also appeared at
the tips of the repair cells. Intense labeling at these sites continued
throughout the healing process until repair cell fusion, at which time the
lectin labeling was reduced to a narrow ring around the area of fusion. When
added to plants prior to wounding and continually monitored, these same lectins
acted as inhibitors to the wound-healing response. Other control lectins showed
no inhibitory effects. A crude extract solution obtained from decapitated
filaments stimulated the wound-healing response, and a lectin-binding component
bound strongly to a protein-binding transfer membrane. These results suggest
that the labeled compound is a glycoprotein that has alpha-D-mannosyl residues
and is similar to the repair hormone rhodomorphin found in Griffithsia pacifica Kylin.
HOOPS HJ
FLAGELLAR,
CELLULAR AND ORGANISMAL POLARITY IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
J CELL SCI 104: 105-117 Part 1 JAN 1993
Abstract:
It has previously been shown that the flagellar apparatus of the mature Volvox carteri somatic cell lacks the 180-degrees rotational symmetry typical
of most unicellular green algae. This asymmetry has been postulated to be the
result of rotation of each half of the flagellar apparatus. Here it is shown
that V. carteri axonemes contain polarity markers that are similar to those found
in Chlamydomonas, except that in V. carteri the number one doublets do not face
each other as they do in Chlamydomonas but are oriented in parallel and at
approximately right angles to the line that connects the flagella. Thus, the
rotational orientations of the axonemes are consistent with the postulate that
the flagella of V. carteri have rotated in opposite directions, as was
predicted earlier from the positions of the basal fibers and microtubular
rootlets. Moreover, high-speed cinephotomicrographic analysis shows that the V.
carteri flagellar effective strokes are also oriented in approximately the same
direction, and in parallel planes. These results suggest that the direction of
the effective stroke in both Chlamydomonas and Volvox is fixed, and that
rotation of the axoneme is the cause of the differences in flagellar motility
observed between Chlamydomonas and Volvox. These
differences are probably essential for effective organismal motility. Cellular
polarity of V. carteri can be related to that of Chlamydomonas after taking
into account the developmental reorientation of flagellar apparatus components.
This reorientation also results in the movement of the eye-spot from a position
nearer one of the flagellar bases to a position approximately equidistant
between them. By analogy to Chlamydomonas, the anti side of the V. carteri
somatic cell faces the spheroid anterior, the syn side faces the spheroid
posterior. The cis side of the cell is to the cell's left (the right to an
outside observer), although it cannot be described solely on the basis of
eyespot position as it can in Chlamydomonas, while the trans side is to the
cell's right It follows that if the direction of the effective flagellar stroke
is specified by structural features, then effective organismal motility in V.
carteri, will be accomplished only if the cells are held in the proper
orientation with respect to one another. The simplest arrangement that will
yield both progression and rotation in ovoid or spherical colonies composed of biflagellate
isokont cells is one in which the cells are arranged with rotational symmetry
about the anterior-posterior axis of the spheroid. Analysis of the polarity of
somatic cells from throughout the spheroid shows that it is constructed with
just such symmetry. This symmetry probably originates with the very first
divisions.
JAENICKE L,
FELDWISCH O, MERKL B, et al.
EXPRESSION
OF HIGHLY-ACTIVE SEX-INDUCING PHEROMONE OF VOLVOX-CARTERI F NAGARIENSIS IN A MAMMALIAN-CELL SYSTEM
FEBS LETT 316 (3): 257-260 FEB 1 1993
Abstract:
A cDNA fragment coding for the sex-inducing glycoprotein of Volvox carteri f. nagariensis was expressed in a mammalian cell system (baby
hamster kidney (BHK) cells). The transfection product exhibited a specific
biological activity intermediate between the natural pheromone of the strains Volvox carteri f. nagariensis and Volvox carteri f.
weismannia. Immunoblot analysis showed that the sex-inducing activity was
expressed as a set of three iso-glycoproteins (35, 34 and 31 kDa).
DENIS H,
LACROIX JC
THE
DICHOTOMY BETWEEN GERM LINE AND SOMATIC LINE, AND THE ORIGIN OF CELL MORTALITY
TRENDS GENET 9 (1): 7-11 JAN 1993
Abstract:
The germ cells of extant animals are potentially immortal, whereas somatic
cells are mortal, that is, they are able to carry out only a finite number of
divisions. In this article we propose an evolutionary interpretation of these
differences. We assume that germ cells of the earliest metazoans inherited
immortality from their unicellular ancestor, while somatic cells acquired
mortality by gaining new functions. It follows that cell mortality was under
genetic control from the beginning of metazoan life.
HOLLOWDAY ED
CEPHALODELLA-EDAX
SP-NOV A ROTIFER PARASITIC IN THE MOTILE COLONIAL ALGA UROGLENA-VOLVOX EHRENBERG
HYDROBIOLOGIA 255: 445-448 APR 16 1993
1992
DUBOUX T,
FERREIRA A, GASTALDO M
MIMD
DICTIONARY MACHINES - FROM THEORY TO PRACTICE
LECT NOTES COMPUT SC 634: 545-550 1992
Abstract:
We describe the implementation of a dictionary structure on a distributed
memory parallel computer. The dictionary is an important data structure used in
applications such as sorting and searching, symbol-table and index-table
implementations. Theoretical as well as practical aspects of the development of
the application are discussed. Our target machine was a Volvox IS860 with 8 nodes, each composed of one Transputer T800 from INMOS plus
an Intel i860. Extensive testing was carried out and the results reported. We
also address problems and solutions connected to the programming environment of
such a machine
BOWSER SS,
ALEXANDER SP, STOCKTON WL, et al.
EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX
AUGMENTS MECHANICAL-PROPERTIES OF PSEUDOPODIA IN THE CARNIVOROUS FORAMINIFERAN
ASTRAMMINA-RARA - ROLE IN PREY CAPTURE
J PROTOZOOL 39 (6): 724-732 NOV-DEC 1992
Abstract:
The seemingly delicate, strand-like pseudopodia of Astrammina rara, a
camivorous benthic foraminiferan, adhere to and withstand the rigorous
movements of meiofaunal prey. Previous electron microscopic studies identified
two novel structures that might account for the unusual tensile properties of
these pseudopodia: 1) an extensive, coiled microtubule cytoskeleton and 2) a
fibrous extracellular matrix vesting the pseudopodial surface. In the present
study, we found that pseudopodial networks microsurgically removed from A.
rara's cell body captured Artemia metanauplii as efficiently as intact
organisms, and therefore used them to test the role of microtubules and
extracellular matrix components in augmenting pseudopodial strength. Agents
that specifically disassemble microtubules (1 mM colchicine or 20 muM
nocodazole) or generally disrupt pseudopodial integrity (heat, 10 mM
formaldehyde, 1 mg/ml saponin) failed to inhibit prey capture. All of these
treatments left the extracellular matrix intact as revealed by
immunofluorescence and scanning electron microscopy. The elastic and tensile
properties of the extracellular matrix, isolated by solubilization of
pseudopodial cytoplasm using the nonionic detergent Triton X-100, were similar
to those of intact pseudopodial networks when assayed with calibrated
microneedles or a flexible rubber substrate. These observations indicate that
A. rara uses a fibrous extracellular matrix to augment cytoplasmic tensile
properties.
MISHRA SR,
SHARMA S, YADAV RK
PHYTOPLANKTONIC
COMMUNITIES IN RELATION TO ENVIRONMENTAL-CONDITIONS OF LENTIC WATERS AT GWALIOR
(MP)
J ENVIRON BIOL 13 (4): 291-296 OCT 1992
Abstract:
A study was undertaken to determine the distribution of phytoplanktonic
communities in two lentic water bodies of variable nature in Gwalior city. The study
revealed that the water quality at Cotton mill waste water pond was severely
destructed. In this pond the abundance of Arthrospira platensis, Volvox sp., Scenedesmus sp., Phacus sp., Euglena gracilis and E. acus was
observed, which depicts their possible sustainance power in stressed habitats.
FABRY S, NASS
N, HUBER H, et al.
THE
YPTV1 GENE ENCODES A SMALL G-PROTEIN IN THE GREEN-ALGA VOLVOX-CARTERI - GENE STRUCTURE AND PROPERTIES OF THE GENE-PRODUCT
GENE 118 (2): 153-162 SEP 10 1992
Abstract:
Small G-proteins encoded by ras-like genes are ubiquitous in eukaryotic cells.
These G-proteins are believed to play a role in central processes, such as
signal transduction, cell differentiation and membrane vesicle transport. By
screening genomic and cDNA libraries of the colonial alga, Volvox carteri f. nagariensis, with ypt DNA probes from Zea mays, we have
identified the first member of a ypt gene family,
yptV1, within a green alga. The 1538-bp yptV1 gene of V. carteri consists of
nine exons and eight introns and has three potential polyadenylation sites 210,
420 and 500 bp downstream from the UGA stop codon. The derived 203-amino-acid
polypeptide, YptV1, exhibits 81% similarity with Ypt1 from mouse, with the
corresponding genes sharing four identical intron positions. Recombinant YptV1
(reYptV1) produced in Escherichia coli retains the ability to bind GTP after
SDS-PAGE and immobilization on nitrocellulose. Immunological studies using
polyclonal antibodies against reYptV1 indicate that the protein is present in
the membrane fraction of a V. carteri extract and is expressed throughout the
whole life-cycle of the alga. Similar to other Ras-like proteins, YptV1
contains two conserved C-terminal cysteine residues suggesting
post-translational modification(s), such as isoprenylation or palmitoylation,
required for membrane anchoring. The presumptive role of YptV1 in cytoplasmic
vesicle transport is briefly discussed.
VOYTAS DF,
CUMMINGS MP, KONIECZNY A, et al.
COPIA-LIKE
RETROTRANSPOSONS ARE UBIQUITOUS AMONG PLANTS
P NATL ACAD SCI USA 89 (15):
7124-7128 AUG 1 1992
Abstract:
Transposable genetic elements are assumed to be a feature of all eukaryotic
genomes. Their identification, however, has largely been haphazard, limited
principally to organisms subjected to molecular or genetic scrutiny. We
assessed the phylogenetic distribution of copia-like retrotransposons, a class
of transposable element that proliferates by reverse transcription, using a
polymerase chain reaction assay designed to detect copia-like element reverse
transcriptase sequences. copia-like retrotransposons
were identified in 64 plant species as well as the photosynthetic protist Volvox carteri. The plant species included representatives from 9 of 10 plant
divisions, including bryophytes, lycopods, ferns, gymnosperms, and angiosperms.
DNA sequence analysis of 29 cloned PCR products and of a maize retrotransposon
cDNA confirmed the identity of these sequences as copia-like reverse
transcriptase sequences, thereby demonstrating that this class of
retrotransposons is a ubiquitous component of plant genomes.
DOMOZYCH DS,
WELLS B, SHAW PJ
THE
CELL-WALL OF THE CHLAMYDOMONAD FLAGELLATE, GLOEOMONAS-KUPFFERI (VOLVOCALES,
CHLOROPHYTA)
PROTOPLASMA 168 (3-4): 95-106 1992
Abstract:
The large unicellular flagellate, Gloeomonas kupfferi, has recently been used
as an important tool in chlamydomonad cell biology research, especially in
studies dealing with the structure and function of the endomembrane system.
However, little is known about the main secretory product, the cell wall. This
study presents structural, chemical and immunological information about this
wall. This 850-900 nm thick matrix is highly elaborate and consists of three
distinct layers: an inner stratum (325 nm thick) consisting of tightly
interwoven fibers, a medial crystalline layer consisting of 22-23 nm subunits
and an outer wall layer (500 nm thick) of outwardly-radiating fibrils. Rapid
freeze-deep etch analysis reveals that the 35-40 nm fibers of the outer layer form
a quasi-lattice of 160 nm subunits. The outer wall can be removed from whole
pellets using the chelator, CDTA. The medial wall complex can be solubilized by
perchlorate. SDS-gel electrophoresis reveals that the perchlorate
soluble-material consists of five high molecular weight glycoproteins and five
major low molecular weight glycoproteins. The electrophoretic profile is
roughly similar to that of Chlamydomonas reinhardtii. Antibodies were
successfully raised against the outer wall component and were shown to label
the outer wall layer.
BUCHHEIM MA,
CHAPMAN RL
PHYLOGENY
OF CARTERIA (CHLOROPHYCEAE) INFERRED FROM MOLECULAR AND ORGANISMAL DATA
J PHYCOL 28 (3): 362-374 JUN 1992
Abstract:
Comparative ultrastructural data have shown that at least two distinct groups
exist within Carteria. Similarly, interpretations of variation in gross
morphological features have led to the discovery of morphologically distinct
groups within the genus. Partial sequences from the nuclear-encoded small- and
large-subunit ribosomal RNA molecules of selected Carteria taxa were studied as
a means of 1) testing hypotheses that distinct groups of species exist within
the genus and 2) assessing monophyly of the genus. Parsimony analysis of the
sequence data suggests that three Carteria species, C. lunzensis, C. crucifera,
and C. olivieri, form a monopkyletic group that is the basal sister group to
all other ingroup flagellate taxa (including species of Chlamydomonas,
Haematococcus, Stephanosphaera, Volvox, and Eudorina).
Two other Carteria taxa, C. radiosa and Carteria sp. (UTEX isolate LB 762),
form a clade that is the sister group to a clade that includes Haematococcus
spp., Chlamydomonas spp., and Stephanosphaera. Thus, the sequence data support
the interpretations of ultrastructural evidence that described two distinct
Carteria lineages. Moreover, the sequence data suggest that these two Carteria
groups do not form a monophyletic assemblage. Parsimony analysis of a suite of
organismal (morphological, ultrastructural, life history, and biochemical)
character data also suggest two distinct lineages among the five Carteria taxa;
however, the organismal data are ambiguous regarding monophyly of these
Carteria taxa. When the two independent data sets are pooled, monophyly of
Carteria is not supported; therefore, the weight of available evidence, both
molecular and organismal, fails to support the concept of Carteria as a natural
genus.
BLAKEFIELD
MK, CALKINS J
INHIBITION
OF PHOTOTAXIS IN VOLVOX-AUREUS
BY NATURAL AND SIMULATED SOLAR ULTRAVIOLET-LIGHT
PHOTOCHEM PHOTOBIOL 55 (6): 867-872 JUN 1992
Abstract:
Exposure to artificial UV wavelengths and the UV component of sunlight delays
positive phototaxis in the green alga Volvox aureus. Broad
band wavelength filters were used to modify the Output from UV-B sources
(280-320 nm) and natural sunlight. The delay in phototaxis by artificial UV is
increased with exposure to shorter UV-B wavelengths. Natural sunlight
experiments were performed with exposure to full sunlight and to its UV
component only. The UV component present in summer sunlight Produced long
periods of inhibition in phototaxis and even lethality, while exposure to the
total spectrum of sunlight had no significant effects on movement or survival.
The data indicate that although this species of alga is well equipped to deal
with present levels of UV exposure, increases in the short UV-B wavelengths in
sunlight may force an alteration in patterns of photomovement.
ERTL H,
HALLMANN A, WENZL S, et al.
A
NOVEL EXTENSIN THAT MAY ORGANIZE EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX BIOGENESIS IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
EMBO J 11 (6): 2055-2062 JUN 1992
Abstract:
ISG is a sulphated, extracellular glycoprotein synthesized for only a few minutes
in inverting Volvox embryos and inverting sperm
cell packets. This control operates at the level of transcription. ISG has been
characterized by studies of protein chemistry and electron microscopy. The
primary structure of ISG has been derived from genomic DNA and cDNA. ISG is
composed of a globular and a rod-shaped domain. The rod-shaped domain
represents a member of the extensin family with numerous repeats of Ser-(Hyp)4-6 motifs. A synthetic decapeptide matching the C-terminal
sequence is able to disaggregate the organism into individual cells.
Immunofluorescence microscopy localizes ISG within the boundary zone of the
ECM.
DESNITSKI AG
CELLULAR MECHANISMS OF THE EVOLUTION OF ONTOGENY IN VOLVOX
ARCH PROTISTENKD 141 (3): 171-178 APR 1992
Abstract:
The green flagellates of the genus Volvox can be
conditionally subdivided into two groups according to the size of gonidia
(asexual reproductive cells) at the onset of cleavage. In Volvox carteri and several other species the gonidium undergoes an extended
period of hypertrophied growth, after which a series of rapid fissions occurs.
Embryonic cells do not grow during the intervals between consecutive divisions.
In representatives of the second group (e.g., V. aureus) the period of gonidial
enlargement is comparatively nondurable; thus the cleavage begins when the
gonidium is relatively small, and each division is followed by a period of
cellular growth.
In this paper the evolutionary
relationships between two types of asexual life cycle in Volvox are
analysed on the basis of literary and our own data. It is supposed that the V.
aureus type of development with slow divisions of small gonidia is more
advanced in the evolutionary respect than the V. carteri type of development
with rapid divisions of large gonidia.
Experimental analysis of the role of
light and dark for embryonic cleavage progression in V. aureus, V. carteri f.
nagariensis and V. tertius as well as the experiments with several metabolic
inhibitors (aminopterin, actinomycin D, cycloheximide and streptomycin) have
enabled us to elucidate cellular mechanisms of the evolution of ontogenesis in Volvox.
MENGELE R,
SUMPER M
GULOSE
AS A CONSTITUENT OF A GLYCOPROTEIN
FEBS LETT 298 (1): 14-16 FEB 17 1992
Abstract:
The aldohexose gulose was identified as a constituent of a hydroxyproline-rich
glycopeptide derived from the glycoprotein SSG 185. This glycoprotein is part
of the extracellular matrix of the green alga Volvox carteri. The
gulose residue occupies a terminal position in the corresponding saccharide.
ALHASANI H,
JAENICKE L
CHARACTERIZATION
OF THE SEX-INDUCER GLYCOPROTEIN OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
F WEISMANNIA
SEX PLANT REPROD 5 (1): 8-12 JAN
1992
Abstract:
Sexual inducer pheromones from Volvox carteri f.
weismannia, strains 65-30(12) and 1B were purified and characterized as
glycoproteins with apparent molecular weights of 27 kDa and 28.5 kDa,
respectively. This subspecies yielded 20-40 times more pheromone based on
weight per spheroid than Volvox carteri f.
nagariensis, but its specific activity (threshold dilution) is four to five
orders of magnitude less (10(-12) to 10(-13) M). Gas-chromatographic sugar
analysis revealed quantitative differences in the composition of the O- and
N-glucans compared with the V. carteri f. nagariensis inducer. The V. carteri
f. weismannia pheromones showed antigenic cross-reaction with an antiserum
directed against chemically deglycosylated inducer from V. carteri f.
nagariensis. However, there is only unilateral biological cross-induction. The
V. carteri f. nagariensis inducer is strictly competent for its own gonidia
only; the inducers from V. carteri f. weismannia also cross-induce V. carteri
f. nagariensis. This pattern of cross-induction suggests the existence of related
pheromone receptors but with different ligand specificities.
LARSON A,
KIRK MM, KIRK DL
MOLECULAR
PHYLOGENY OF THE VOLVOCINE FLAGELLATES
MOL BIOL EVOL 9 (1): 85-105 JAN 1992
Abstract:
Phylogenetic studies of approximately 2,000 bases of sequence from the large
and small nuclear-encoded ribosomal RNAs are used to investigate the origins of
the genus Volvox. The colonial and multicellular genera currently
placed in the family Volvocaceae form a monophyletic group that is
significantly closer phylogenetically to Chlamydomonas reinhardtii than it is
to the other unicellular green flagellates that were tested, including
Chlamydomonas eugametos, Chlorella pyrenoidosa, and Haematococcus lacustris.
Statistical analysis of 251 phylogenetically informative nucleotide positions
rejects the "volvocine lineage" hypothesis, which postulates a
monophyletic evolutionary progression from unicellular organisms (such as
Chlamydomonas), through colonial organisms (e.g., Gonium, Pandorina, Eudorina,
and Pleodorina) demonstrating increasing size, cell number, and tendency toward
cellular differentiation, to multicellular organisms having fully
differentiated somatic and reproductive cells (in the genus Volvox). The genus Volvox appears not to be
monophyletic. Volvox capensis falls outside a
lineage containing other representatives of Volvox(V. aureus, V. carteri, and V.
obversus), and both of these Volvox lineages are more
closely related to certain colonial genera than they are to each other. This
implies either a diphyletic origin of Volvox from different
colonial volvocacean ancestors, a phylogenetic derivation of some of the
colonial genera from a multicellular (i.e., Volvox) ancestor, or
both. Considered together with previously published observations, these results
suggest that the different levels of organizational and developmental
complexity found in the Volvocaceae represent alternative stable states, among
which evolutionary transitions have occurred several times during the
phylogenetic history of this group.
SCHMITT R,
FABRY S, KIRK DL
IN
SEARCH OF MOLECULAR-ORIGINS OF CELLULAR-DIFFERENTIATION IN VOLVOX AND ITS RELATIVES
INT REV CYTOL 139: 189-265 1992
MENGELE R,
SUMPER M
GULOSE
AS A CONSTITUENT OF A GLYCOPROTEIN
FEBS LETT 298 (1): 14-16 FEB 17 1992
1991
KOUFOPANOU V,
BELL G
DEVELOPMENTAL
MUTANTS OF VOLVOX - DOES MUTATION
RECREATE THE PATTERNS OF PHYLOGENETIC DIVERSITY
EVOLUTION 45 (8): 1806-1822 DEC 1991
Abstract:
The nature of the variation which is created by mutation can show how the
direction of evolution is constrained by internal biases arising from development
and pre-existing design. We have attempted to quantify these biases by
measuring eight life history characters in developmental mutants of Volvox carteri. Most of the mutants in our sample were inferior to the wild
type, but deviated by less than tenfold from the wild-type mean. Characters
differed in mutability, suggesting different levels of canalisation. Most
correlations between life history characters among strains were positive, but
there was a significant negative correlation between the size and the number of
reproductive cells, suggesting an upper limit to the total quantity of germ
produced by individuals. The most extreme phenotypes in our sample were very
vigorous, showing that not all mutations of large effect are unconditionally
deleterious. We investigated the effect of developmental constraints on the
course of evolution by comparing the variance and covariance patterns among
mutant strains with those among species in the family Volvocaceae. A close
correspondence between patterns at these two levels would suggest that
pre-existing design has a strong influence on evolution, while little or no
correspondence shows the action of selection. The variance generated by
mutation was equal to that generated by speciation in the family Volvocaceae,
the genus Volvox, or the section Merillosphaera, depending on the
character considered. We found that mutation changes the volume of somatic
tissue independently of the quantity of germ tissue, so that the interspecific
correlation between soma and germ can be attributed to selection. The negative
correlation between size and number of germ cells among mutants of V. carteri
is also seen among the larger members of the family (Volvox spp.), but not among the smaller members, suggesting a powerful design
constraint that may be responsible for the absence of larger forms in the
entire group.
HAAS E,
SUMPER M
THE
SEXUAL INDUCER OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
- ITS LARGE-SCALE PRODUCTION AND SECRETION BY SACCHAROMYCES-CEREVISIAE
FEBS LETT 294 (3): 282-284 DEC 9 1991
Abstract:
The DNA sequence coding for the sexual inducer glycoprotein of Volvox carteri and its N-terminal signal peptide was placed under the control
of the repressible acid phosphatase promoter of the yeast Saccharomyces
cerevisiae in a yeast-E. coli shuttle vector. Yeast
transformed by this construct synthesized and secreted into the culture medium
biologically active inducer in amounts two to three orders of magnitude higher
than observed in the Volvox system.
JAENICKE L,
VANLEYEN K, SIEGMUND HU
DOLICHYL
PHOSPHATE-DEPENDENT GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASES UTILIZE TRUNCATED COFACTORS
BIOL CHEM H-S 372 (11): 1021-1026 NOV 1991
Abstract:
Synthetic truncated dolichyl phosphates of chain lengths from four to thirteen
isoprene units (Jaenicke L. and Siegmund H.-U., Chem. Phys. Lipids 51 (1989) 159-170)
were assayed for their cofactor activity in the enzymatic transfer of hexoses
and hexosamines. The enzymes were microsomal preparations from the green alga Volvox carteri, baker's yeast, and mammalian liver cells. Under saturating
conditions, the acceptor activities of the truncated dolichyl phosphates
increased from zero to full strength as compared to the mixture of long-chain
dolichyl phosphates from natural sources with growing chain length from five to
nine isoprene units. K(m) determinations confirmed the
results. Of the geometric isomers of dolichyl 7-phosphate (35 carbon atoms),
the 14-trans compound has unchanged acceptor activity; all-trans dolichyl
7-phosphate, however, was almost inactive. The data suggest that hydrophobicity
may be an important, but not the only criterion for the binding of the isoprene
moiety to the active sites of the transferase enzyme(s) and that the geometry
of more than only one double bond in the dolichols is recognized.
KIRK DL,
KAUFMAN MR, KEELING RM, et al.
GENETIC
AND CYTOLOGICAL CONTROL OF THE ASYMMETRIC DIVISIONS THAT PATTERN THE VOLVOX EMBRYO
DEVELOPMENT : 67-82 Suppl. 1 1991
Abstract:
The highly regular pattern in which approximately 2000 small somatic cells and
16 large reproductive cells (or 'gonidia') are arranged in a typical asexual
adult of Volvox carteri can be traced back to a stereotyped program
of embryonic cleavage divisions. After five symmetrical divisions have produced
32 cells of equal size, the anterior 16 cells cleave asymmetrically, to produce
one small somatic cell initial and one larger gonidial initial each. The
gonidial initials then cease dividing before the somatic cell initials do. The
significance of the visibly asymmetric divisions is underscored by genetic and
experimental evidence that differences in size - rather than differences in
cytoplasmic quality - are causally important in activating the programs that
cause small cells to become mortal somatic cells and large cells to
differentiate as reproductive cells. A number of loci, including at least five
mul ('multiple gonidia') loci, appear to be responsible for determining where
and when asymmetric divisions will occur, since mutations at these loci result
in modified temporal and/or spatial patterns of asymmetric division in one or
more portions of the life cycle. But the capacity to divide asymmetrically at
all appears to require a function encoded by the gls (gonidialess) locus, since
gls mutants fail to execute any asymmetric divisions. Second-site suppressors
of gls that have been identified may encode other functions required for
asymmetric division. Cytological and immunocytochemical studies of dividing
embryos are being undertaken in an attempt to elucidate the mechanisms by which
cell-division planes are established - and shifted - under the influence of
such pattern-specifying genes. Studies to date clearly indicate a central role
for the basal body apparatus, and particularly its microtubular rootlets, in
establishing the orientation of both the mitotic spindle and the cleavage
furrow; but it remains to be determined how behavior of the division apparatus
becomes modified during asymmetric division.
WAYNE R,
KADOTA A, WATANABE M, et al.
PHOTOMOVEMENT
IN DUNALIELLA-SALINA - FLUENCE RATE-RESPONSE CURVES AND ACTION SPECTRA
PLANTA 184 (4): 515-524 1991
Abstract:
We determined the action spectra of the photophobic responses as well as the
phototactic response in Dunaliella salina (Volvocales) using both single cells
and populations. The action spectra of the photophobic responses have maximum
at 510 nm, the spectrum for phototaxis has a maximum
at 450-460 nm. These action spectra are not compatible with the hypothesis that
flavoproteins are the photoreceptor pigments, and we suggest that
carotenoproteins or rhodopsins act as the photoreceptor pigments. We also
conclude that the phototactic response in Dunaliella is an elementary response,
quite independent of the step-up and step-down photophobic responses. We also
determined the action spectra of the photoaccumulation response in populations
of cells adapted to two different salt conditions. Both action spectra have a
peak a 490 nm. The photoaccumulation response may be a complex response
composed of the phototactic and photophobic responses. Blue or blue-green light
does not elicit a photokinetic response in Dunaliella.
TAM LW, KIRK
DL
THE
PROGRAM FOR CELLULAR-DIFFERENTIATION IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
AS REVEALED BY MOLECULAR ANALYSIS OF DEVELOPMENT IN A GONIDIALESS SOMATIC
REGENERATOR MUTANT
DEVELOPMENT 112 (2): 571-580 JUN 1991
Abstract:
Development of a 'gonidialess'/'somatic regenerator' double mutant of Volvox carteri was analyzed with a number of cell-type-specific cDNA probes
that had been identified in a previous study. Whereas in wild-type strains
somatic cells and gonidia (asexual reproductive cells) constitute two distinct
cell lineages, in this mutant all cells first differentiate as somatic cells
and then redifferentiate as gonidia. During the initial period of somatic differentiation,
we found that both gonidial and 'early' somatic transcripts were accumulated in
the mutant, consistent with the idea that it is the regA gene product (which is
defective in this mutant) that normally acts to suppress gonidial gene
expression in somatic cells. Later in development, levels of early somatic
transcripts fell abruptly, levels of the late somatic transcripts remained
extremely low, and levels of gonidial transcripts rose as the cells
redifferentiated. Thus it appears that in the mutant cells the gonidial program
of development takes over and somatic differentiation is aborted before the
stage at which late somatic genes are normally activated. These results provide
molecular genetic support for a model which postulates that three types of
genes (including the two that are defective in the strain studied here) are
crucial for converting the sequential program of differentiation seen in more
primitive volvocalean algae to the dichotomous program of germ-soma
differentiation that occurs in wild-type V. carteri.
ROSATI G,
VERNI F
SEXUAL
RECOGNITION IN PROTOZOA - CHEMICAL SIGNALS AND TRANSDUCTION MECHANISMS
ZOOL SCI 8 (3): 415-429 JUN 1991
TAM LW,
STAMER KA, KIRK DL
EARLY
AND LATE GENE-EXPRESSION PROGRAMS IN DEVELOPING SOMATIC-CELLS OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
DEV BIOL 145 (1): 67-76 MAY 1991
RANSICK A
REPRODUCTIVE
CELL SPECIFICATION DURING VOLVOX-OBVERSUS
DEVELOPMENT
DEV BIOL 143 (1): 185-198 JAN 1991
1990
BUCHHEIM MA,
TURMEL M, ZIMMER EA, et al.
PHYLOGENY
OF CHLAMYDOMONAS (CHLOROPHYTA) BASED ON CLADISTIC-ANALYSIS OF NUCLEAR 18S
RIBOSOMAL-RNA SEQUENCE DATA
J PHYCOL 26 (4): 689-699 DEC 1990
Abstract:
The genus Chlamydomonas Ehrenberg may contain as many as 450 described species.
Morphological, physiological and molecular data show that variation among some
Chlamydomonas species can be great, leading to speculation that multiple,
generic-level lineages exist within this genus. The most recent systematic
studies of Chlamydomonas have led to proposals of nine distinct morphological
and 15 distinct sporangial autolysin groups. Partial sequences from the nuclear
small subunit rNAs from 14 Chlamydomonas species
representing 12 autolysin and four morphological groups, and from three
flagellates thought to be related to Chlamydomonas were determined in a
phylogenetic study of relationships among these algae. Sequence comparisons
among some Chlamydomonas species revealed differences comparable to the
sequence divergence between soybeans and cycads. Cladistic analysis of the
sequence data suggests that multiple lineages exist among species of
Chlamydomonas. Some of these lineages represent alliances of both Chlamydomonas
and non-Chlamydomonas taxa; thus, the current taxonomy does not reflect
natural, or monophyletic, groups. Collectively, these lineages may represent
distinct families or even orders.
CRESNAR B,
MAGES W, MULLER K, et al.
STRUCTURE
AND EXPRESSION OF A SINGLE ACTIN GENE IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
CURR GENET 18 (4): 337-346 NOV 1990
MULLER K,
LINDAUER A, BRUDERLEIN M, et al.
ORGANIZATION
AND TRANSCRIPTION OF VOLVOX
HISTONE-ENCODING GENES - SIMILARITIES BETWEEN ALGAL AND ANIMAL GENES
GENE 93 (2): 167-175 SEP 14 1990
BALSHUSEMANN
D, JAENICKE L
THE
OLIGOSACCHARIDES OF THE GLYCOPROTEIN PHEROMONE OF VOLVOX-CARTERI F NAGARIENSIS IYENGAR (CHLOROPHYCEAE)
EUR J BIOCHEM 192 (1): 231-237 AUG 28 1990
ADAMS CR, STAMER
KA, MILLER JK, et al.
PATTERNS
OF ORGANELLAR AND NUCLEAR INHERITANCE AMONG PROGENY OF 2 GEOGRAPHICALLY
ISOLATED STRAINS OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
CURR GENET 18 (2): 141-153 AUG 1990
BALSHUSEMANN
D, JAENICKE L
TIME
AND MODE OF SYNTHESIS OF THE SEXUAL INDUCER GLYCOPROTEIN OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
FEBS LETT 264 (1): 56-58 MAY 7 1990
WAFFENSCHMIDT
S, KNITTLER M, JAENICKE L
CHARACTERIZATION OF A SPERM LYSIN OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
SEX PLANT REPROD 3 (1): 1-6 FEB 1990
1989
ERTL H,
MENGELE R, WENZL S, et al.
THE
EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
- MOLECULAR-STRUCTURE OF THE CELLULAR COMPARTMENT
J CELL BIOL 109 (6): 3493-3501 Part 2 DEC 1989
BALSHUSEMANN
D, GILLES R, JAENICKE L
THE
BIOCHEMISTRY OF THE SEX INDUCER OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
BIOL CHEM H-S 370 (9): 873-874 SEP 1989
FELDWISCH O,
ERK H, JAENICKE L
CYCLIC-AMP
BINDING-PROTEIN AND PHOSPHODIESTERASES IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
BIOL CHEM H-S 370 (9): 895-895 SEP 1989
FELDWISCH O,
ERK H, JAENICKE L
CYCLIC-AMP
BINDING-PROTEIN AND PHOSPHODIESTERASES IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
BIOL CHEM H-S 370 (9): 895-895 SEP 1989
HOLST O,
CHRISTOFFEL V, FRUND R, et al.
A
PHOSPHODIESTER BRIDGE BETWEEN 2 ARABINOSE RESIDUES AS A STRUCTURAL ELEMENT OF
AN EXTRACELLULAR GLYCOPROTEIN OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
EUR J BIOCHEM 181 (2): 345-350 MAY 1 1989
1988
KASKA DD,
MYLLYLA R, GUNZLER V, et al.
PROLYL
4-HYDROXYLASE FROM VOLVOX-CARTERI
- A LOW-MR ENZYME ANTIGENICALLY RELATED TO THE ALPHA-SUBUNIT OF THE VERTEBRATE
ENZYME
BIOCHEM J 256 (1): 257-263 NOV 15 1988
HARPER JF,
MAGES W
ORGANIZATION
AND STRUCTURE OF VOLVOX
BETA-TUBULIN GENES
MOL GEN GENET 213 (2-3): 315-324 AUG 1988
MAGES W,
SALBAUM JM, HARPER JF, et al.
ORGANIZATION
AND STRUCTURE OF VOLVOX
ALPHA-TUBULIN GENES
MOL GEN GENET 213 (2-3): 449-458 AUG 1988
GOODENOUGH
UW, HEUSER JE
MOLECULAR-ORGANIZATION
OF CELL-WALL CRYSTALS FROM CHLAMYDOMONAS-REINHARDTII AND VOLVOX-CARTERI
J CELL SCI 90: 717-733 Part 4 AUG 1988
MAGES HW,
TSCHOCHNER H, SUMPER M
THE
SEXUAL INDUCER OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
PRIMARY STRUCTURE DEDUCED FROM CDNA SEQUENCE
FEBS LETT 234 (2): 407-410 JUL 18 1988
NOZAKI H
MORPHOLOGY,
SEXUAL REPRODUCTION AND TAXONOMY OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
F KAWASAKIENSIS F NOV (CHLOROPHYTA) FROM JAPAN
PHYCOLOGIA 27 (2): 209-220 JUN 1988
MULLER K,
SCHMITT R
HISTONE
GENES OF VOLVOX-CARTERI -
DNA-SEQUENCE AND ORGANIZATION OF 2 H3-H4 GENE LOCI
NUCLEIC ACIDS RES 16 (9): 4121-4136 MAY 11 1988
KIRK DL
THE
ONTOGENY AND PHYLOGENY OF CELLULAR-DIFFERENTIATION IN VOLVOX
TRENDS GENET 4 (2): 32-36 FEB 1988
1987
ADAIR WS, STEINMETZ SA, MATTSON DM, et al.
NUCLEATED
ASSEMBLY OF CHLAMYDOMONAS AND VOLVOX
CELL-WALLS
J CELL BIOL 105 (5): 2373-2382 NOV 1987
MULLER K,
RAUSCH H, SCHMITT R
MOLECULAR
EVOLUTION OF VOLVOX CARTERI
PROBED WITH HISTONE AND RDNA GENES
BIOL CHEM H-S 368 (9): 1084-1084 SEP 1987
GUNTHER R,
BAUSE E, JAENICKE L
UDP-L-ARABINOSE-HYDROXYPROLINE-O-GLYCOSYLTRANSFERASES
IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
FEBS LETT 221 (2): 293-298 SEP
14 1987
HARPER JF,
HUSON KS, KIRK DL
USE
OF REPETITIVE SEQUENCES TO IDENTIFY DNA POLYMORPHISMS LINKED TO REGA, A
DEVELOPMENTALLY IMPORTANT LOCUS IN VOLVOX
GENE DEV 1 (6): 573-584 AUG 1987
TSCHOCHNER H,
LOTTSPEICH F, SUMPER M
THE
SEXUAL INDUCER OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
- PURIFICATION, CHEMICAL CHARACTERIZATION AND IDENTIFICATION OF ITS GENE
EMBO J 6 (8): 2203-2207 AUG 1987
KIRK DL,
BARAN GJ, HARPER JF, et al.
STAGE-SPECIFIC
HYPERMUTABILITY OF THE REGA LOCUS OF VOLVOX,
A GENE REGULATING THE GERM SOMA DICHOTOMY
CELL 48 (1): 11-24 JAN 16 1987
1986
SCHLIPFENBACHER
R, WENZL S, LOTTSPEICH F, et al.
AN
EXTREMELY HYDROXYPROLINE-RICH GLYCOPROTEIN IS EXPRESSED IN INVERTING VOLVOX EMBRYOS
FEBS LETT 209 (1): 57-62 DEC 1 1986
KIRK DL, KIRK
MM
HEAT-SHOCK
ELICITS PRODUCTION OF SEXUAL INDUCER IN VOLVOX
SCIENCE 231 (4733): 51-54 JAN 3 1986
COGGIN SJ,
KOCHERT G
FLAGELLAR
DEVELOPMENT AND REGENERATION IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
(CHLOROPHYTA)
J PHYCOL 22 (3): 370-381 SEP 1986
WENZL S,
SUMPER M
A
NOVEL GLYCOSPHINGOLIPID THAT MAY PARTICIPATE IN EMBRYO INVERSION IN VOLVOX CARTERI
CELL 46 (4): 633-639 AUG 15 1986
SOMMER U,
GLIWICZ ZM
LONG-RANGE
VERTICAL MIGRATION OF VOLVOX IN
TROPICAL LAKE CAHORA BASSA (MOZAMBIQUE)
LIMNOL OCEANOGR 31 (3): 650-653 MAY 1986
KIRK DL,
HARPER JF
GENETIC,
BIOCHEMICAL, AND MOLECULAR APPROACHES TO VOLVOX DEVELOPMENT AND EVOLUTION
INT REV CYTOL 99: 217-293 1986
WENZL S,
SUMPER M
EARLY
EVENT OF SEXUAL INDUCTION IN VOLVOX
- CHEMICAL MODIFICATION OF THE EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX
DEV BIOL 115 (1): 119-128 MAY 1986
BARAN GJ,
HUSKEY RJ
DEVELOPMENTAL-CHANGES
IN THE SENSITIVITY OF VOLVOX TO
ULTRAVIOLET-LIGHT
DEV GENET 6 (4): 269-280 1986
KIRK DL, KIRK
MM
GENETIC
AND ENVIRONMENTAL-REGULATION OF DETERMINATION AND DIFFERENTIATION IN VOLVOX
J CELL BIOCHEM : 37-37 Suppl. 10D
1986
SCHMITT R,
MULLER K, RAUSCH H, et al.
HOUSEKEEPING
GENES AND THEIR EXPRESSION IN THE GENERATION CYCLE OF VOLVOX-CARTERI
J CELL BIOCHEM : 43-43 Suppl. 10D
1986
KIRK DL,
BIRCHEM R, KING N
THE
EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX OF VOLVOX -
A COMPARATIVE-STUDY AND PROPOSED SYSTEM OF NOMENCLATURE
J CELL SCI 80: 207-231 FEB 1986
1985
JAENICKE L,
GILLES R
GERM-CELL
DIFFERENTIATION IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
DIFFERENTIATION 29 (3): 199-206 1985
GILLES R,
MOKA R, JAENICKE L
THE
EXTRACELLULAR-MATRIX PLAYS A FUNCTIONAL-ROLE IN SEXUAL-DIFFERENTIATION OF VOLVOX CARTERI
BIOL CHEM H-S 366 (9): 793-794 1985
KIRK MM, KIRK
DL
TRANSLATIONAL
REGULATION OF PROTEIN-SYNTHESIS, IN RESPONSE TO LIGHT, AT A CRITICAL STAGE OF VOLVOX DEVELOPMENT
CELL 41 (2): 419-428 1985
GILLES R,
MOKA R, GILLES C, et al.
CYCLIC-AMP
AS AN INTRASPHEROIDAL DIFFERENTIATION SIGNAL IN VOLVOX-CARTERI
FEBS LETT 184 (2): 309-312 1985
KOPAN R, KURN
N, OVADIA M
SYNTHESIS
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1980
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1974
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PALL ML
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1973
DARDEN WH
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