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Acetylcholine receptors in the central nervous system of Drosophila melanogaster.
Authors:E Rudloff
Institution:Department of Biological Sciences, University of California, Santa Barbara, CA 93106, USA
Abstract:Mating between gametes of the biflagellated unicellular green alga Chlamydomonas reinhardi consists of several events culminating in zygote formation. Initially, the cells agglutinate by their flagellar tips. This is followed by pairing, cell wall loss, and cell fusion. Here we report on the relationship between the length of the flagellum, and the cells' ability to agglutinate, undergo cell wall loss (as measured by medium carbohydrate accumulation), and to form zygotes. We found that deflagellated gametes regained the potential for sexual agglutination when the flagella had regenerated to less than 3 μm (compared to the full length flagella of approx. 11 μm), while medium carbohydrate appeared only after the flagella had reached an average length greater than 5 μm. By inhibiting flagellar regeneration with cycloheximide or colchicine, we determined that carbohydrate release is related to the length of the flagellum and not to the time after deflagellation. A flagellar length dependence similar to that of carbohydrate release was also observed when we measured the relationship between the gametes' ability to fuse and flagellar length.
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