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Replacement and aging of chloroplasts inStrombidium capitatum (Ciliophora: Oligotrichida)
Authors:D K Stoecker  M W Silver
Institution:(1) Biology Department, Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution, 02543 Woods Hole, Massachusetts, USA;(2) Institute of Marine Sciences, University of California, 99064 Santa Cruz, California, USA
Abstract:The planktonic ciliateStrombidium capitatum (Leegaard, 1915) Kahl, 1932 retains functional chloroplasts derived from ingested algal cells. Chloroplast replacement and aging were experimentally investigated in cultured ciliates provided with a cryptophyte (Pyrenomonas salina), a prymnesiophyte (Isochrysis galbana) and a prasinophyte (Pyramimonas sp.) as sources of plastids. All three algae were ingested and chloroplasts from all were retained by the ciliate. Within 15 min of exposure to the cryptophyte, this alga was taken up by the ciliates. Initially, most of the cryptophyte chloroplasts were in intact algal cells in ciliate vacuoles. By 2 h, cryptophyte plastids were commonly found free in the ciliate cytoplasm. WhenS. capitatum was switched from a diet containing cryptophytes to a non-cryptophyte diet, most cryptophyte chloroplasts were diluted out of the ciliates by cell division and/or replaced by non-cryptophyte chloroplasts within 9 h. When the ciliates are not provided with algae, they decrease in size and number. However, the starving ciliate cells contain some chloroplasts for as long as they live (40 h or more). Under these conditions, cryptophyte chloroplasts persist longer than the other chloroplast types. Our observations suggest that chloroplast retention times inS. capitatum depend on the type of chloroplast as well as the availability of phytoplankton containing suitable new chloroplasts, and probably also on the physiological states of the ingested algae and the ciliates. It is interesting that we were not able to grow this ciliate when we provided it only with prey that lacked chloroplasts.Contribution No. 7241 from Woods Hole Oceanographic Institution. This research was supported by NSF grants OCE-8600765 and OCE-8709961 to D.K.S
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