AI Article Synopsis

  • The green algal genus Volvox shows diverse mating systems, including homothallism and heterothallism, with the "Volvox africanus" species exhibiting many variations, some of which are now extinct.
  • Researchers rediscovered a third mating system in Thai strains that produces separate male and female spheroids, confirming the species belongs to V. africanus.
  • Phylogenetic analysis suggests that this third mating system could represent an early stage in the evolutionary transition from heterothalism to homothallism, indicating potential for further biodiversity studies in stable freshwater regions.

Article Abstract

Background: The oogamous green algal genus Volvox exhibits extensive diversity in mating systems, including heterothallism and homothallism with unisexual (male and/or female) and/or bisexual spheroids. Although four mating systems have been recognized worldwide in strains identified as "Volvox africanus", most of these strains are extinct. However, we previously rediscovered two types of the four mating systems (heterothallic, and homothallic with male and bisexual spheroids within a clone) from an ancient Japanese lake, Lake Biwa.

Results: Here, we obtained strains exhibiting the third mating system (homothallic with unisexual male and female spheroids within a clone) from a freshwater area of Kalasin Province, Thailand. When sexual reproduction was induced in the present Thai strains, both male and female unisexual spheroids developed to form smooth-walled zygotes within a clonal culture. Phylogenetic analyses of the internal transcribed spacer region-2 of nuclear ribosomal DNA sequences from all four mating systems, including the extinct strains, resolved the third mating system is basal or paraphyletic within the homothallic clade.

Conclusions: The present morphological and molecular data of the Thai strains indicate that they belong to the homothallic species V. africanus. The phylogenetic results suggested that third mating system (homothallic with separate male and female sexual spheroids) may represent an initial evolutionary stage of transition from heterothallism to homothallism within Volvox africanus. Further field collections in geologically stable intracontinental regions may be fruitful for studying diversity and taxonomy of the freshwater green algal genus Volvox.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8782957PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s40529-022-00332-1DOI Listing

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