| Literature DB >> 27716922 |
Bernabé Santelices1, Alejandra V González2, Jessica Beltrán1, Verónica Flores1.
Abstract
Chimerism is produced by the somatic fusion of two or more genetically distinct conspecific individuals. In animals, the main cost of fusion is competition between genetically different cell lineages and the probability of original cell line replacement by more competitive invasive lines, which limits its natural frequency (3%-5%). In red and brown seaweeds, chimerism is widespread (27%-53%), seemingly without the negative outcomes described for animals. The rigidity of cell walls in macroalgae prevents cell motility and invasions. In addition, in moving waters, most somatic fusions involve the holdfast. Histological observations in laboratory-built bicolor macroalgal chimeras indicated that upright axes emerge from the base of plants by proliferation and vertical growth of discrete cell groups that include one or just a few of the cell lineages occurring in the holdfasts. Laboratory experiments showed growth competition between cell lineages, thus explaining lineage segregation during growth along originally chimeric erect axes. Genotyping of the axes showed more heterogeneous tissues basally, but apically more homogeneous ones, generating a vertical gradient of allele abundance and diversity. The few chimeric primary branches produced, eventually became homogenous after repeated branching. Therefore, coalescing macroagae exhibit a unique pattern of post-fusion growth, with the capacity to reverse chimerism. This pattern is significantly different from those in animals and land plants, suggesting chimerism is a biologically heterogeneous concept.Entities:
Keywords: cell competition; cell lineage segregation; chimerism; coalescence; upright axes formation
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27716922 DOI: 10.1111/jpy.12476
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Phycol ISSN: 0022-3646 Impact factor: 2.923