首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 31 毫秒
1.
Leadbeater BS  Henouil M  Berovic N 《Protist》2008,159(3):495-505
Acanthoeca spectabilis is one of the most common loricate choanoflagellates found in marine biofilms everywhere. However, it is special for two reasons; firstly, it is probably the most distinctive member of the small nudiform clade of loricate choanoflagellates. Secondly, the lorica chamber of Acanthoeca comprises a closely wound left-handed coil of costae that is unique amongst choanoflagellates. Mathematical analysis of the lorica chamber shows that the helical costae undergo two turns. This species, more than any, demonstrates that the helical coiling of costae can only be achieved by a rotational movement generated by the cell during lorica assembly. Comparison of the lorica morphology of Acanthoeca with that of the closely related genus Polyoeca indicates that the helical costae of Acanthoeca are probably homologous with the outer longitudinal costae of Polyoeca. This is unusual because helical costae are usually the innermost layer of costae. However, since there is no 'true' inner layer in the chamber of Acanthoeca the outer layer of costae are adjacent to the cell surface and therefore available for coiling. In contrast to tectiform choanoflagellates, which number more than one hundred species and inhabit a wide variety of microniches, the six known extant nudiform species must either represent a minor evolutionary development or be the remnants of a previously more extensive radiation.  相似文献   

2.
ABSTRACT. Cell division in Acanthoeca spectabilis produces a "naked" motile daughter cell (juvenile) that settles onto a surface and deposits siliceous costal strips that are stored extracellularly in bundles. When complete, the bundles of strips are assembled in a single continuous movement to form a basket-like lorica. Assembly can be divided into four overlapping stages. Stage 1 entails the left-handed rotation of strips at the anterior end while the posterior end remains stationary. Stage 2 includes the posterior protrusion of the cell to form a stalk. Stage 3 involves the anterior extension of the spines, and Stage 4 the dilation of the lorica chamber and deposition of the organic investment. Scanning electron microscopic images reveal a one-to-one association between the moving bundles of strips and the anterior ring of lorica-assembling tentacles. Treatment with microtubule inhibitors produces "dwarf" cells that lack stalks, have their spines extended, and possess collars but lack flagella. Treatment with microfilament (actin) inhibitors prevents extension of the anterior spines. These experiments demonstrate that posterior cell extension is primarily mediated by microtubules whereas extension of the spines is controlled by the actin cytoskeleton. The processes of cytoskeletal rotation and extracellular costal strip movement are compared, respectively, with rotation of nuclei in animal embryos and movement of mammalian cells over surfaces.  相似文献   

3.
Summary Cell division inStephanoeca diplocostata follows the accumulation of a large number of costal strips in horizontal bundles at the top of the parent collar. Prior to nuclear division the flagellum is lost and the protoplast is large and rectangular. Nuclear division takes place whilst the protoplast undergoes vigorous metabolic movements and subsequent cytokinesis is achieved by equatorial constriction. The anterior of the two daughter protoplasts is the juvenile and is inverted with respect to the sister which remains attached to the parent lorica. The two protoplasts are joined by a cytoplasmic strand that consists of two threads both of which are initially attached to the daughter protoplasts at one side of the collar. Cell separation involves elongation of the strand and after each thread has broken contact with one of the daughter cells the two threads slide over each other until the juvenile is released. The juvenile takes the accumulation of supernumerary strips as it leaves the parent lorica and after release of the juvenile the strips are mobilised to form a new lorica. The collar tentacles of the parent are thought to play a significant role in the movement of strips during division and certain selected tentacles on the juvenile are associated with lorica assembly. Cell separation takes between 9–12 minutes and lorica assembly by the juvenile 2–3 minutes.  相似文献   

4.
Leadbeater BS 《Protist》2008,159(2):259-268
The lorica of Savillea spp. (Choanoflagellida) comprises a two layered arrangement of siliceous costae, the inner layer consists of helical costae and the outer layer longitudinal. In Savillea micropora, the helical costae, in a left-handed conformation, undergo 1.5 turns and extend from a short distance above the base of the lorica to the anterior opening. In S. parva the helical costae undergo two turns from base to anterior opening. Ratios of the numbers of helical to longitudinal costae vary from 1:1 in S. parva to 1:1-1:4 in S. micropora. Cell division in Savillea is of the nudiform type, whereby a cell divides to produce a 'naked' flagellated juvenile that swims away from the parent lorica, settles on to a surface and produces a complete set of costal strips. The first formed strips are those that will form the longitudinal costae, this is followed by the slightly thicker strips which will form the inner helical costae. Lorica assembly occurs as a single continuous process and is mediated by the forward movement of the collar tentacles and a rotational movement by the cell. The longitudinal and helical costae are thereby moved in this one combined movement to their respective positions. The longitudinal costae must rotate freely during assembly whilst the helical costae are held at their front end by the respective longitudinal costae and their rear end on the surface of the cell sheath. The concluding inference, based on lorica construction, that there must be a rotational as well as the observed forward movement during lorica assembly is of seminal importance to understanding the basic pattern of lorica construction and the mechanism of lorica assembly in all choanoflagellates.  相似文献   

5.
Diaphanoeca grandis posseses a voluminous flask-shaped lorica comprising an outer layer of 12 longitudinal costae and an inner layer of four transverse costae. The cell is suspended just above the centre of the lorica chamber by tentacles that are attached to the anterior transverse ring. The component costal strips are superficially similar although four different strip categories can be distinguished on the basis of length and morphology. Costal strips are produced ‘upside-down’ within the parent cell and accumulated in a close-packed horizontal ring at the top of the inner surface of the collar. The order in which costal strips are produced is consistent, starting with those for the transverse rings, basal to anterior, and then the longitudinal costae, again with the posterior first and the anterior later. Cell division is of the classical tectiform variety with the juvenile cell being inverted and pushed backwards out of the parent lorica. Lorica assembly entails firstly the rotation of the anterior vertical strips so they become horizontal and then their movement backwards under the posterior layer of longitudinal strips. From this time onwards, lorica assembly proceeds in a standard manner with the lorica-assembling tentacles providing a forward and left-handed rotational movement.  相似文献   

6.
Summary Stephanoeca diplocostata has a facultative requirement for silica in that silica starvation does not inhibit growth as measured by increase in cell numbers. In spite of the absence of a lorica silica impoverished protoplasts still divide in the characteristic tectiform manner and a juvenile protoplast, when released from the parent cell, still extends its lorica assembling tentacles despite the absence of costal strips with which to produce a lorica. Replenishment of silica to silica starved cells in mid to late exponential phase cultures results in a decrease in the growth rate but at the same time silica is taken up and utilised for the deposition of costal strips. Mature costal strips are extruded and accumulated in bundles of 5–8 on the surface of the protoplast but are not passed to the top of the collar as would be expected in silica enriched loricate cells. Eventually silica replenished protoplasts use the bundles of costal strips to assemble loricae for themselves. In early exponential phase cultures naked protoplasts are capable of division whilst at the same time depositing costal strips in preparation for subsequent lorica assembly. An undamaged protoplast deprived of its lorica by ultrasonic treatment also ultimately replaces the lost lorica. The manner in which the tectiform mode of costal strip accumulation and lorica assembly is modified to allow a cell to produce its own lorica is discussed.Abbrevations SDV silica deposition vesicle  相似文献   

7.
Summary Cells ofStephanoeca diplocostata comprise a colourless, flagellated, protoplast lodged in a lorica made of siliceous costae. The single anterior flagellum creates a water current from which bacteria and other food particles are filtered by the collar and ingested by linguiform pseudopodia that arise from the protoplast at the base of the collar. A waist divides the lorica into two chambers, the anterior of which contains three transverse and 17–20 longitudinal costae whereas the posterior chamber comprises two systems of spirally deflected costae and on some cells a pedicel at the hind end. Between 150–185 costal strips of similar length form the lorica. A thin investment covers the inner surface of the posterior chamber and lower part of the anterior chamber and joins with the protoplast at the level of the waist. Costal strips are produced within membrane-bounded vesicles in the peripheral cytoplasm and, although the origin of these vesicles is unknown, there is usually a close association with the Golgi apparatus. Once complete, strips are apparently released sideways through the plasmalemma into the cavity of the posterior lorica chamber. Later, bundles of strips are transferred to the top of the inner surface of the collar where they collectively form a horizontal ring. When sufficient strips to form a lorica have been accumulated at the top of the collar, cell division proceeds.  相似文献   

8.
ABSTRACT The lorica of the tectiform choanoflagellate D. costata contains five categories of costal strips distinguishable from each other on the basis of morphology and patterning. Categories of strips include those forming the anterior transverse costa; the anterior, intermediate, and posterior costal strips, respectively, of the longitudinal costae and those constituting the posterior transverse costa. the distinctive morphology of each class of strips makes it possible to observe their location and orientation within the overall accumulation of strips at the top of the parent cell collar. In Diplotheca costata the orientation and positioning of the different categories of strips in an accumulation anticipates their orientation and imbrication in the mature lorica. Assembly of the lorica from an accumulation of strips involves lateral sliding of costal strips to constitute transverse costae and longitudinal sliding of strips to constitute longitudinal costae. the motive force for lorica assembly is provided by extension of the anterolateral tentacles.  相似文献   

9.
A new genus and species of loricate choanoflagellate, Kakoeca aniarctica Buck & Marchant gen. et sp.n. grown in rough culture from an Antarctic sea ice innoculum is described. This organism has a distinctive lorica morphology consisting of more than 200 costal strips arranged in transverse and longitudinal costae that arc perpendicular to one another in the posterior portion of the lorica. The transverse costae show declination with respect to the lorica axis in the anterior part of the lorica. The cell is suspended in the lorica by a robust protoplast suspensory membrane. This membrane blocks water flow from the posterior of the lorica necessitating water entry through the side of the lorica, an area where the maximum sized apertures in the lorica are found. Terminology (lorica lining and protoplast suspensory) is suggested for the two types of lorica membranes which have been found associated with loricas.  相似文献   

10.
A new species of acanthoecid choanoflagellate isolated from brackish waters of the Danshui estuary in North Taiwan has a mineralized lorica that consists of two chambers with a total length of 19-36microm. It shares with Diplotheca costata the features of a posterior lorica chamber formed from broad and flattened costal strips and an anterior chamber with spatula-shaped costal strips. The new species has therefore been placed in the same genus and named Diplotheca elongata. A phylogenetic analysis of partial SSU rDNA sequences from Diplotheca costata and D. elongata supports this taxonomic affiliation. This is a large and distinctive choanoflagellate which has not been reported in any previous study, suggesting that it may be an endemic species of restricted distribution.  相似文献   

11.
A new acanthoecid choanoflagellate species, Acanthocorbis mongolica sp. nov. was found in preserved phytoplankton samples from the freshwater lake Bayan Nuur (Uvs Nuur Basin, NW Mongolia) in concentrations of up to 1.8×10(5)cellsL(-1). It is the first well-documented species of the mainly marine order Acanthoecida to be found in a freshwater lake. The lorica structures were studied with scanning electron microscopy. Key morphological features of the vase-shaped lorica are spine bases that are composed of multiple (2-4) parallel costal strips, and the existence of two transverse costae. The ecological implications of this find are discussed.  相似文献   

12.
Three new acanthoecidaean species collected from the coastal waters of Taiwan and Japan are described: Acanthocorbis camarensis n. sp. resembles Acanthocorbis unguiculata in lorica morphology, but differs in having regularly arranged longitudinal and transverse costae at the anterior lorica chamber, and in lacking a nail at the apical end of anterior spine; Diaphanoeca spiralifurca n. sp. is characterized by the spiral arrangement of the costal strips in the posterior half of the lorica chamber and is closely related to Diaphanoeca grandis; Stephanoeca supracostata n. sp. is closely related to Stephanoeca elegans, but differs in having an additional transverse costa at the anterior lorica chamber.  相似文献   

13.
Growth, turnover of silica and lorica morphology of Stephanoeca diplocostata Ellis have been investigated in batch cultures at 20 °C. Mean cell doubling times for separate experiments ranged from 9.1–13.8 h. During exponential growth, uptake of reactive silicate progressed steadily and throughout this phase the average amount of biogenic silicon per cell was 2.1 pg. Once growth declined, net dissolution of silica from loricae became apparent and progressed steadily throughout the stationary and death phases. The minor difference in solubility between loricae of living cells and costal strips cleaned with acid indicates that even if an organic component is associated with the silica of costal strips it does not inhibit silica dissolution. The first effects of silica dissolution on cells as revealed by electron microscopy are limited to corrosion on the surfaces and the hollowing out of the centres of costal strips but ultimately a consistent pattern of lorica disintegration occurs.  相似文献   

14.
SYNOPSIS. Neustonic choanoflagellates can be found in marine tide pools in the San Juan Islands, Washington, and on the Monterey Peninsula, California. Several marine photo-synthetic Chrysophyceae (in the Pedinellaceae), which also occur in these regions, have a basic structure so similar to choanoflagellates that this family is placed in the Craspedomonadales. In pointing out this relationship, the derivation of the Craspedomonadales from pigmented Chrysophyceae is strongly indicated.
In addition to the naked choanoflagellates, which are placed in the Codonosigaceae, these organisms produce loricae of two different types: 1) loricae possibly of cellulose and without visible structure in the light microscope (Salpingoecaceae), 2) loricae composed of silica strands, sometimes forming a mesh with large open spaces (Acanthoecaceae). Members of the latter family seem to be confined to a marine environment and are a prominent part of this investigation. Examination of several species with the electron microscope has revealed interesting details of lorica morphology that are not visible with the light microscope.
Several new combinations of taxa are proposed in addition to new taxa, including 4 new species of Salpingoeca , 3 new species of Diploeca and 4 new species of Pleurasiga. Three new genera are described, Ellisiella gen. nov., Acanthoecopsis gen. nov., and Sportelloeca gen. nov.  相似文献   

15.
Summary InStephanoeca diplocostata microtubules are located in four positions namely: within the flagellar axoneme; just beneath the plasmalemma; associated with the silica deposition vesicles (SDVs) during early stages of costal strip deposition; and in the mitotic spindle. At the anterior end of the cell the 50–60 peripheral microtubules, which are organized more or less parallel to the long axis of the cell, converge around the base of the emergent flagellum. A short second flagellar base is positioned between the nucleus and the base of the emergent flagellum. Developing costal strips are located individually within SDVs in the peripheral cytoplasm. During the early stages of silica deposition each SDV is curved and subtended longitudinally on its concave side by two microtubules. When a costal strip has achieved sufficient rigidity to withstand bending the SDV-associated microtubules are depolymerized. Treatment of exponentially growing cells with sublethal concentrations of microtubule poisons, such as colchicine, podophyllotoxin, griseofulvin andVinca alkaloids depresses growth. Treatment with these drugs also affects the length and morphology of developing costal strips perhaps by interfering with the shaping and supporting functions of SDV-associated microtubules. Instead of being long and crescentic with a standard radius of curvature, costal strips of treated cells are usually short and misshapen, with irregular bends. After drug treatment, juveniles produced as a result of cell division do not develop flagella but can still assemble a lorica although it is usually misshapen. The role of microtubules and microfilaments in lorica production is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
17.
A new genus, Helgoeca gen. nov., has been designated to accommodate a nudiform loricate choanoflagellate (American Type Culture Collection strain ATCC 50073) that was incorrectly attributed to the tectiform genus Acanthoecopsis (=Acanthocorbis). The first indication that this species might be nudiform came from a four-gene phylogeny of the choanoflagellates which recovered ATCC 50073 within a strongly supported monophyletic clade comprising two other nudiform taxa. Fortunately an isolate of the species in question was available from the ATCC and when observed in rapidly growing culture it was immediately apparent that this species divided with the production of 'naked' motile cells; a typically nudiform character. The beaker-shaped lorica of this species consists of an outer layer of approximately 11 longitudinal costae, which terminate anteriorly as spines, and an equal or larger number of helical costae, with a left-handed conformation, each of which terminates anteriorly adjacent to the base of a spine. The pattern of costae in this species is indistinguishable from that of Acanthocorbis nana Thomsen and for this reason A. nana has been transferred to the new genus Helgoeca gen. nov., as the type species.  相似文献   

18.
Choanoflagellates are unicellular filter-feeding protozoa distributed universally in aquatic habitats. Cells are ovoid in shape with a single anterior flagellum encircled by a funnel-shaped collar of microvilli. Movement of the flagellum creates water currents from which food particles are entrapped on the outer surface of the collar and ingested by pseudopodia. One group of marine choanoflagellates has evolved an elaborate basket-like exoskeleton, the lorica, comprising two layers of siliceous costae made up of costal strips. A computer graphic model has been developed for generating three-dimensional images of choanoflagellate loricae based on a universal set of 'rules' derived from electron microscopical observations. This model has proved seminal in understanding how complex costal patterns can be assembled in a single continuous movement. The lorica, which provides a rigid framework around the cell, is multifunctional. It resists the locomotory forces generated by flagellar movement, directs and enhances water flow over the collar and, for planktonic species, contributes towards maintaining cells in suspension. Since the functional morphology of choanoflagellate cells is so effective and has been highly conserved within the group, the ecological and evolutionary radiation of choanoflagellates is almost entirely dependent on the ability of the external coverings, particularly the lorica, to diversify.  相似文献   

19.
20.
设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号