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Variability of autogamy-maturation pattern in genetically identical populations of Paramecium tetraurelia. | LitMetric

Variability of autogamy-maturation pattern in genetically identical populations of Paramecium tetraurelia.

Zoolog Sci

The Division of Human Environmental Sciences, Graduate School of Human Culture, Nara Women's University, Nara, Japan.

Published: November 2002

AI Article Synopsis

  • Autogamy in Paramecium tetraurelia is a sexual reproduction process in single cells, leading to homozygosity and is triggered by starvation after several fissions.
  • The study assessed the variability of autogamy patterns at different fission ages (9, 18, and 27) in a specific stock and how these patterns are inherited across generations.
  • Results showed percent autogamy was stable at ages 9 and 27, but highly variable at age 18 (3% to 100%) and offspring autogamy didn't follow a predictable pattern based on parental autogamy levels.

Article Abstract

Autogamy in Paramecium tetraurelia is a form of sexual reproduction in a single cell that results in homozygosity in every genetic locus. Autogamy becomes inducible by natural starvation several fissions after the previous autogamy, and percent autogamy increases gradually with clonal age to reach 100%. We here report the degree of variability of the autogamy-maturation pattern, and how it is inherited through autogamous generations. We assessed the autogamy-maturation pattern by monitoring percent autogamy at the ages of 9, 18 and 27 fissions in the wild-type stock 51. To determine how the autogamy-maturation pattern is inherited, clones that showed the lowest and the highest percent autogamy at age 18 in a given autogamous generation (Gn) were examined for their percent autogamy in the next autogamous generation (Gn+1). This procedure was repeated through successive autogamous generations. We found that percent autogamy at ages 9 and 27 was rather stable (low and high, respectively), while it was extremely variable at age 18 ranging from 3% to 100%. We also found that percent autogamy at age 18 in the progeny clones was variable irrespective of percent autogamy at age 18 in the parental clones; there was no regular rule such as producing progeny with higher (or lower) percent autogamy from parents with lower (or higher) percent autogamy.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.2108/zsj.19.1245DOI Listing

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